Design
Our main advice when designing a UX CV would be – don’t go
over the top. Your CV should really reflect the current design trends of the
day, so clean and easy to navigate. Whilst you may have fantastic motion
graphics skills for example, basing the design of your CV around them can
result in a cluttered, confusing user experience. You want to stay away from
anything which requires a high loading time or interaction to ‘reveal’ key
information. ‘Concept’ CVs could be perfect for some companies, but we
would suggest including a link to a separate plainer document, in case that
suits the reader better.
Make it obvious
Sometimes, a recruiter or employer – when faced with a
selection of CVs – will only have time to dedicate twenty or thirty seconds to
your profile. You must aim to make your top skills and experience as obvious as
possible. A good trick for this is utilising a summary of keywords or short
sentences summarising all of the methodologies and tools you’ve used. If your
skills and experience are lost within a large body of text, there’s a chance
this important information could be missed.
Erase ambiguity
Go through your CV as a potential employer would. Is there
any ambiguity about your skills, qualifications, experience or even what you’re
looking for next? If something doesn’t quite add up or is hard to decipher,
this is where problems may have arisen. Why not get a friend who knows the
business to read over your CV in detail and highlight any areas they feel don’t
match up with your profile.
Link everything
If your CV has piqued a hiring manager’s interest, the next
logical step for them is to check you out, online. But wait – what if they
can’t find you at the click of a button? Include a section with your portfolio,
a password for the portfolio if necessary, your LinkedIn, Google Plus and
Twitter. The aim is to keep them on your profile for as long as possible,
by making it easy for them to surf between social media and web sites.
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