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Editor’s note: This article is the first of two parts.
Part II
provides tips and examples for using a blog as a resume.
Through the use of a variety of online tools -- blogs, wikis, social-networking sites, portfolios,
podcasts, Youtube videos, and more -- individuals, especially younger people, are socially
constructing their identities in ways unimagined a dozen or so years ago.
Where a dedicated careerist of old constructed a job-seeking identity through a resume and
a few other printed materials disseminated to audiences that seem puny by today’s standards,
postmillennial upwardly mobile types are establishing their career identities to vast global
audiences using the tools of the so-called Web 2.0, defined in part by Web guru Tim O’Reilly
as comprising an “architecture of participation.” The concept of Web 2.0 “suggests that
everyone … can and should use digital media to express and realize themselves,” writes
Andrew Keen in The Daily Standard.
And recruiters are responding. Case in point is the notion of the blog as a replacement
or accompaniment for a resume. Sarah E. Needleman reported on the
Career Journal site
that Ryan Loken, a Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., recruitment manager, had filled an estimated 125 corporate
jobs by reading blogs. Well-known recruiting blogger Heather Hamilton, a staffing manager at
Microsoft, noted in her blog that “recruiters are searching blogs specifically for resumes.” Recruiters
who responded to blog postings on the topic of blogs as replacements for resumes made such
comments as:
“Our stance is that blogging is important -- at least in our medium -- and we
are developing a strategy around it. We are conducting a search for a Marketing
Director right now -- if an applicant doesn’t blog, or at least contribute heavily,
it’s fair to say that we are going to pass them by.”
The concept of the blog as resume has been the subject of several articles in 2006 and 2007,
most of them, appropriately, blog postings with numerous follow-up comments by blog readers
and posters. Dave Lefkow’s 2006 entry on ERE.net (a site for executive recruiters) entitled
My
Blog is My Resume (registration may be required to see the full article), talks about “the
changing dynamics of the Web’s second generation.” His article’s implications for job-seekers are apparent in these excerpts:
Many job seekers, growing up in the level playing field that is the innovation
economy, will often expect to be judged by their ideas, not their experience.
Resumes will become irrelevant (or at best, a meaningless formality that
describes your work history, not who you are).
Why are some employers and recruiters coming to see tools like blogs as more revealing
and authentic than resumes? One blog commenter explains: “Think about it -- a resume is
one or two pages, of flat, static information. A blog is an interactive space where you can
really see inside of a prospect’s head -- their ability to innovate, think, and communicate.
You not only find out what they’ve done for work, but what their passions are, and frankly if
they’re the type of person you think would fit into your organization.”
Another commenter noted that the new generation craves personal contact. A blog provides
a way to move beyond a resume’s “one to two pages of flat, static information” and create
a sense of personal contact. When you reader a blogger’s work, you often have a sense of
knowing him or her even though you’ve never met.
Lefkow’s blog entry and indeed the entire discussion of the idea of blogs as replacements for
resumes seems to have originated with an entry on
Scobleizer,
the blog of Robert Scoble, who noted that he hadn’t needed a resume to get his most recent job
and implied that he didn’t expect to need one in the future. Scoble also asserted that his Wikipedia
entry takes the place of a resume. This brief posting elicited 59 comments. Similarly, Adam
Darowski in his blog, Traces of Inspiration, submitted an entry entitled
The
Blog is the New Resume, and Joshua Porter followed with an identically titled posting
on his blog, Bokardo,
both of which generated extensive comments that provide glimpses into a future in which
blogs -- or other tools -- might take the place of resumes -- or not.
Darowski wrote, “Wouldn’t it be nice to have more than a vague bulleted list of accomplishments
before actually picking up the phone to call the person? There is. There’s blogging. Blogging is
the perfect way for a candidate to give an employer a more detailed sales pitch -- to show they
can ‘talk the talk’ (as opposed to just fill a resume with buzzwords).”
Porter added a five-point list of the advantages blogs have over resumes, including a
blog’s ability to represent the individual, its archival quality, and the blogger’s editorial
control over it. One of his commenters noted that the editorial control enables the blogger to
go back into archived entries and update or revise them.
Among other pro-blog-as-resume points made by commenters:
Darowski proved his point when he was hired by a new company, whose hiring manager
wrote of Darowski’s blog,
Ram Prasad, creator of the MegaLinux blog
reported: “I have been fortunate enough to have gotten a job because of my blog.”
Not all of those who commented on the Scoble, Lefkow, Darowski, and Porter blog entries
agreed that blogs are the best alternatives to resumes – or even that resumes should be replaced:
Final Thoughts
Blogs also have the advantage of what Scoble calls Bloggings’s Six Pillars, six key differences
between blogging and any other communications channel. Blogs are publishable, findable,
social (because the blogosphere is one big conversation), viral (meaning they spread information
quickly), syndicatable, and linkable (potentially many other blogs will link to yours). Of these
pillars, only publishability and findability apply to resumes.
Questions about some of the terminology used in this article? Get more information (definitions and links) on key college, career, and job-search
terms by going to our Job-Seeker's Glossary of Job-Hunting Terms.
Have you taken advantage of all the many free resume tools, articles, samples, and more that we
have in the Resume Resources section
of Quintessential Careers?
“We’ve hired two people fresh out of college in the past four months that
we found through their blogs -- one didn’t even have a formal resume.
Frankly, he didn’t need one. A blog trumps a resume every single time.”
Privacy is no longer an issue. This generation seems quite comfortable
publishing all of the gory details of their lives online. Some of these details
will shock you. Get used to workers who are perfectly functioning members
of the work world, but who perhaps make decisions in their personal lives
that you find appalling.
“While Adam’s cover letter and resume provided a telling introduction, his blog
was the real page turner. I learned he thinks beyond the immediate problem, he
self motivates, he aggressively educates himself, he aggressively educates those
around him and he’s a Red Sox fan. I would have discovered some of this eventually
from the interview, the references and various other communications. But in the blog,
it all became part of the first impression, helping him stand out from the crowd early on.”
So, bottom line, which should you have -- a resume or a blog? Both, for now. Many in the
career field predict the death of the resume, but for now, it’s still expected in most job-seeking
venues. But a blog, carefully handled, communicates 24/7 to a global audience your personality,
passion, expertise, skill in expressing yourself, sense of humor, and often, your fit with a
company or industry. While blogs are more embraced -- and even expected -- in some industries
more than others, they comprise one more tool that will get your name and expertise out there
and boost your job search.
Katharine Hansen, Ph.D., creative director and associate
publisher of Quintessential Careers, is an educator, author,
and blogger who provides content for Quintessential Careers,
edits QuintZine,
an electronic newsletter for jobseekers, and blogs about storytelling
in the job search at A Storied
Career. Katharine, who earned her PhD in organizational behavior
from Union Institute & University, Cincinnati, OH, is author of Dynamic
Cover Letters for New Graduates and A Foot in the Door: Networking
Your Way into the Hidden Job Market (both published by Ten Speed Press),
as well as Top Notch Executive Resumes (Career Press); and with
Randall S. Hansen, Ph.D., Dynamic Cover Letters, Write Your
Way to a Higher GPA (Ten Speed), and The Complete Idiot's Guide
to Study Skills (Alpha). Visit her
personal Website
or reach her by e-mail at
kathy(at)quintcareers.com.
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