The Plain English Guide To Cvs
The Plain English Guide To Cvs
The Plain English Guide To Cvs
Copyright Plain English Campaign owns the copyright to this guide. You can save one copy of the guide to disk, and print one copy out for your personal use. You must not make more than one copy without our permission.
Personal details
The first important information you need to provide is your personal details. These need to be correct and at the very top of the page. You need to put your name, contact address, phone number (daytime and
evening), email address (if you have one) and age. You must be honest about your personal details as an employer won't give you a job if you lie. Here is an example of what to include.
Personal details
John Smith Address: 20 Union Road New Mills High Peak SK22 4QP Phone: 01663 744409 (daytime) or 07999 663 554 (evening) Email address: [email protected] Age: 28
Work experience
In this section you need to show all the jobs that you have had. This can even include jobs that you had at school (if they are relevant). As with your education and qualifications, you need to fill in your information in reverse chronological order. You need to include the dates the job started and finished work, your job title, who you worked for, where you worked and a brief description of what you did there. Here is an example of what to include.
Work experience
April 2001 to September 2001 Office assistant: Andrew's Solutions, New Mills I helped to write courses which are used on the Internet. I provided quick and efficient help in writing, letters, sending out important information, filing, faxing, finding valuable information on the internet and much more.
July 1994 to February 1998 Sales executive: The Plexia Group PLC, Chinley I was responsible for contacting and visiting existing, potential and past customers throughout England. I designed and wrote a new company leaflet. The company sent this out to all potential customers in the UK, helping to increase sales. I organised and co-ordinated transport, planning collections and deliveries for three vehicles. I was in charge of my own administration letter writing, contracts, accounts, updating computer databases, answering the phone and much more. January 1994 to April 1995 Bar person: The Dandy Cock, Debley I worked well under pressure and, at times,
in an abusive atmosphere. I learnt to defuse difficult situations in a diplomatic way. I gained good communication skills and performed well within my team.
Tip: use short sentences to describe what you did and only include relevant and positive information. Don't include things like 'I made cups of tea all day'!
Further information
This is where you write down any other skills, qualifications or information that might help you get that job. This section can include things such as: a clean driving licence (useful if you are applying to deliver parcels); or a black belt in karate (useful if you are applying to be a nightclub bouncer). Remember, only include information which is relevant. Don't put things like 'I can drink a pint of lager in three seconds.' Before you go on to fill in your other skills, write them all down on a piece of scrap paper and choose which ones you want to include. Here is an example of what you may include.
Further information
I am fully competent in using Microsoft Office packages such as Word, Excel and PowerPoint. My typing is accurate and fast (70 words a minute). I am very confident, use my initiative and work well within a group. Remember - keep your sentences short, positive and relevant. Use a different line for each statement.
Interest
Use this section to include interests that you enjoy when you are not working. This section usually gives the reader an idea of your personality. This can be good or bad it all depends on what you write. Here is an example.
Interests
Mountain biking and walking I enjoy exploring and taking challenging routes. Reading from current affairs to novels. Swimming as relaxation.
Many people tend to bend the truth a little in this section. This is not always a good idea. Imagine if your boss is a keen walker and asks you to go on a 20-mile walk with him, because you said that you walk every weekend, when actually you don't even like walking from the car to the office! If you haven't really got any other interests, try and think about what you do at the weekends. You may go to nightclubs or watch television all weekend. This is fine if you use the right words. For example: I enjoy socialising at weekends and visiting local attractions. is better than saying: I go clubbing all weekend and I'm knackered by Monday. I like to keep up to date with current affairs. is better than saying: I don't do anything apart from watch telly. Note: This is one of the few places it might not be a good idea to use plain English! Now get a piece of scrap paper and write down everything that you enjoy doing or have an interest in. When you have written them down, try to put them into better words and pick out the positive points. Remember keep your sentences short, positive and relevant. Use a different line for each statement.
Referees
In this section you need to include the names and addresses of two people who will provide references for you.
This may not seem very important, but it is! Your prospective employer will probably contact one or both of these people and you have to be sure of a few things. Things to do before you put down your referees. Choose two people who you know would give you a good reference. You need to have one personal and one professional referee. The professional referee would usually be from someone you have worked for. The personal one may be an academic one or somebody you have known for a long time.
If you have not had a job or been in education, find two people you have known for a long time. Your referees must not be related to you. Make sure that you ask their permission before you include them. Check their details. They may have changed their address, phone number or name.
What next?
If you have followed this guide, you will have a basic CV. All you have to do now is go and get that job! You can click here to see an example of a finished CV. (It's taken from the examples we have used in this guide.) This may help if you are uncertain about how to lay out your own CV. Remember that when you send off your CV you will need to include a covering letter. We have a guide to letter writing which may be helpful.