3 Steps to get your resume shortlisted by Google(or any other MNC)
3 Steps to get your resume shortlisted by Google(or
any other MNC)
There’s nothing special about Google that
wouldn’t apply to Microsoft, Amazon, Facebook, or another major tech
company. There are really three parts to this answer: getting the right
experience, creating a good resume, and submitting it the right way.
Getting the Right Experience:
1.
If you come from a good school / work for a well respected
company, that’ll help you a ton. But anyone can boost their resume with some
projects.
2.
Build some iPhone apps, web apps, whatever!
Honestly it doesn’t matter that much what you’re
building as long as you’re building something. Good languages include Java,
Python, Ruby on Rails, C++, etc. I would encourage you to stay away from .NET.
Not because .NET isn’t a perfectly good tool, but there’s a stigma.
3.
Doing these projects is especially important if
you’re, say, a programmer for CitiBank. You don’t have the right “pedigree.”
But projects will help you a ton.
4.
You can build a fairly meaty project in one
weekend. This means that with about 3 – 4 weekends of work, you can make your
resume go from so-so to fantastic. Seriously — I’ve seen lots of people do
this.
5.
Participate in hackathons, build a website or
portfolio. Show your experience.
Building a Great Resume:
1.
One page only. When you go onto two pages, you
add weaker content to your resume, by definition. And
when your resume is only read for about 15 seconds, it’s the average content
that matters, not the “total amount of content.”
2.
Use a real resume format. Don’t create your own —
it tends to waste space and look sloppy.
3.
List your projects, hackathons, etc. Don’t worry
about whether or not something is “resume appropriate.” Does it make you look
more impressive? Then include it.
4.
Keep your bullets short – 1 to 2 lines each.
Bullets that are 3 or more lines look like paragraphs and won’t be read.
5.
Focus on accomplishments, not responsibilities. The
first line of each bullet should be a word like built, created, implemented,
designed, architected, optimized, etc.
6.
Quantify your accomplishments. Did you optimize
something? Okay, then tell me by how much.
7.
No summaries. They don’t tell me anything other
than what position you’re applying for and I already know that.
Submitting Your Resume:
1.
Too many people stop with just one avenue. They
apply once, and then figure that’s enough. Try all available avenues.
2.
If you’re active on Github, Stack Overflow, etc,
there’s a chance a recruiter will come to you. But there’s no reason to wait
for that.
3.
Apply online. It’s tough, but people do get their
resume selected that way.
4.
Ask around to your friends. Does any work at
Google? Or know someone who does? It’s a huge help if someone will refer you.
5.
Try reaching out to Google engineers on Twitter,
Quora, or other social media. Remember that your first contact with them is,
effectively, a cover letter. Don’t just say “Hi, I’m interested in Google, will
you refer me?” Reach out to them and tell them about some of the things you’ve
done, and then link them to your resume.
Again,
this advice applies to all companies, and much of it to many positions as well.
SOURCE : www.toptalent.in
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