Below is part 1 of the Top 10 consulting resume mistakes. Some are corollaries of my Top 10 consulting resume tips, but the majority are unique.
1. Inadequate spacing throughout the resume
You don't want consultants to say your resume is too packed with text. Readers will lose attention - which is not good when your resume is one of 300 in the review stack.
One method that helps is careful line spacing. Expand and shrink empty lines in your resume by manipulating the default font size.
Some areas where spacing is critical:
-Between the section heading (eg, "Professional experience") and the 1st block (eg, "GE summer internship")
-Between each experience within the category
-At the end of a description and the start of a new section
-At the page margins - nothing less than 0.5" (vertical and horizontal)
Ignore it and your resume will be a sore sight for the eyes.
2. Lack of numbers
Data and numbers are the most visible part of your resume - things like your GPA, quantitative results at work and extracurriculars.
Numbers help your resume accomplish the following:
-Highlight resume "takeaways" - and trust me, you need at least 2-3 of these to get an interview
-Prevent your resume from suffering the "too full of text" disease
-Help your resume be more results-focused
3. Missing a hobbies and interests section
Use one line, avoid generic interests, don't put more than 3 to 5.
4. Generic, filler fellowships/awards/honors
Point 4 and Point 5 fall into the category of "too much useless content in the education section".
Unless it's a nationally recognized award/scholarship/fellowship, refrain from including it. If you do include, explain how selective it is.
5. Long coursework lists
It's great that you took "Technology Management". Only:
-No one knows what you learned
-No consultant cares about what you covered
-No reviewer will understand how that applies to consulting
It's ok to list tough classes taken on your resume for interviews (eg, Econometrics 101, Linear Equations 202). But include them only if:
-It's clear what the topic of the course is
-What the course is about is very technical and challenging
-You don't list more than 3-5 courses
Management Consulted is a resource for understanding business consulting. Written by a former McKinsey consultant, it covers topics including recruiting, resumes, interviews, and case studies. Read the consulting interview guide today!Government Lawyer Jobs: Government Lawyer Job
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