A resume summary needs to capture what the recruiter and hiring manager should expect to see in the entire resume. It should be a glimpse of the resume. It should not be the only place that a recruiter finds your skill sets. Keep in mind that your resume summary should repeat, in short, what your work experience states in more detail. When written correctly, this key strategy will help highlight your talent and increase your chances of getting you in front of the hiring manager.
When you're writing a resume summary I would recommend that you write it after you've completed all of your related work experience. If you're revising your resume it might be better to just delete your resume summary, update your work experience, and re-write a new resume summary by taking words from your work experience. This is key! Take words from your related work experience and insert those words in your resume summary.
For example, let's say you worked at IBM as a tester and you conducted black box testing for a project. Your work experience could look something like this:
EXPERIENCE:
IBM, Sacramento, CA (Jan 2005 - Dec 2012)
Rational Tester
- Performed Quality Assurance (QA) testing which included black box testing for project X.
IBM, Sacramento, CA (Jan 2005 - Dec 2012)
Rational Tester
- Performed Quality Assurance (QA) testing which included black box testing for project X.
Remember, many recruiters use a keyword search strategy as an effective technique to help find the right talent. If those keywords only appear in the resume summary and no where else in the resume, the recruiter is likely to move on to the next candidate.
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