Susan Britton Whitcomb
Auteur de Resume Magic: Trade Secrets of a Professional Resume Writer
A propos de l'auteur
Since 1984, Susan Britton is founder of Career Coach U, and principal of California-based Whitcomb Career Consulting
Œuvres de Susan Britton Whitcomb
The Twitter Job Search Guide: Find a Job and Advance Your Career in Just 15 Minutes a Day (2010) 36 exemplaires
e-Resumes: Everything You Need to Know About Using Electronic Resumes to Tap into Today's Hot Job Market (2001) 20 exemplaires
Build a Powerful Promotion Plan in a Month 1 exemplaire
Étiqueté
Partage des connaissances
- Nom canonique
- Whitcomb, Susan Britton
- Nom légal
- Whitcomb, Susan Britton
- Autres noms
- Whitcomb, Susan B
- Sexe
- female
Membres
Critiques
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 8
- Membres
- 392
- Popularité
- #61,822
- Évaluation
- 3.2
- Critiques
- 4
- ISBN
- 32
My thoughts: First. DON'T get the ebook! Get a hard-copy, because the figures and tables are really tiny in ebook format. Second, this book did not really have a lot of information that was relevant to writing a CV, for those of us who have a PhD. Although Whitcomb provided examples of resumes for a large variety of job types, she focused primarily on business, sales, and marketing. Sometimes I wondered if her tips applied to me or not. However, the book DID provide enough information for me to make my resume more presentable. Third, the title. Ouch. I almost didn't buy this book because the title was too pretentious. Fourth, Whitcomb was a bit heavy-handed with her self-marketing: Resume Magic often read like an advertisement for Whitcomb's webpage and other books.
And now I see that my thoughts are rather top-heavy in criticism. I hadn't intended my review to be negative. Resume Magic is loaded with information and tips, and I'm much happier with my CV now than I was before reading this book. Resumes and job hunting have changed dramatically in the last few years, and books like these are very helpful for catching up on what employers are expecting. Because, let's face it, first impressions are a LOT about presentation. And don't we all want to make a good first impression?
I haven't read any other resume books, and I don't have the time to do so right now, so I can't very easily compare this to other books on the market. I have been reading Joyce Lain Kennedy's Job Interviews for Dummies and Job Search Letters for Dummies, though, so I can make a guess at what her Resumes for Dummies is like. My guess is that Whitcomb's book is more heavy in specific tips, and Kennedy's books tend to be more general. They both provide a lot of good examples, and they both explain what makes those examples stand out. But Whitcomb's style is more self-aggrandizing and opinionated. Kennedy recommends books by authors other than herself (including Whitcomb!), which makes her advice seem more sincere and approachable. So I guess if you're trying to choose between the two - pick Whitcomb if you want a book heavy in information, and Kennedy if you want more general advice from someone who's willing to reference opinions other than her own (even when they do not exactly coincide with her own).
For more, see the full review on my blog Resistance is Futile… (plus d'informations)