Saturday, November 16, 2019
Are resumes becoming obsolete This CEO thinks so
Are resumes becoming obsolete This CEO thinks so Are resumes becoming obsolete This CEO thinks so Even with new innovations like LinkedIn, website portfolios and unique interview questions, one part of the job application process has always remained the same - the resume. Itâs a standard document that highlights your recent and relevant experiences. Itâs your one-sheet; your main rationale for getting this job.But what if it didnât have to be? According to top CEOs, resumes arenât the best identifier for good hires. Jeff Weiner, CEO of LinkedIn, believes that the key to finding strong talent isnât looking at more resumes - itâs about looking in non-traditional places.Speaking at the ASU GSV Summit, Weiner acknowledged that companies need to update the way theyâve traditionally hired people. âThere are qualities⦠that have a tendency to be completely overlooked when people are sifting through resumes or LinkedIn profiles,â Weiner said. âAnd yet, increasingly, we find that these are the kinds of people that make the biggest difference within our organi zation.âFor individuals who have many skills but few experiences, resumes arenât an accurate summary of their potential. Resumes do a good job providing a timeline of your work history, but they focus on aspects that donât necessarily apply to the work youâll be doing with a specific company.Laszlo Bock, Googleâs former head of human resources, told The New York Times that employees without any college education are just as (if not more) valuable as those with a traditional degree.âAfter two or three years, your ability to perform⦠is completely unrelated to how you performed when you were in school,â Bock said. âThe skills you required in college are very different. Youâre also fundamentally a different person. You learn and grow, you think about things differently.âGoogle famously used to ask everyone for a transcript and G.P.A.âs and test scores, but we donât anymore,â Bock said. âWe found that they donât predict anything.âWeiner agrees. Itâ s one of the reasons he supports LinkedInâs internship program, REACH, and its focus on a new kind of recruiting.âYes, degrees from specific schools can lead us to finding incredible talent. But itâs not the exclusionary domain of incredible talent,â Weiner said. âThis [program] is trying to get away from this idea that everyone on the engineering team, everyone we recruit, has to have come from a specific school and has to have a specific kind of degree.âUnlike a traditional internship program, REACH is an apprenticeship. For six months, participants work full-time as a member of LinkedInâs functional engineering team to learn from managers. By proving their skills at the end of the program, successful apprentices have the potential to be offered a full-time software engineering role.âWeâre looking for folks with a growth mindset,â Weiner said. âWeâre looking for people with the dedication, with the work ethic. We want to give them a shot. And what weâr e finding is, these people are⦠incredibly talented, and they need a chance.âBock agrees. âYou want people who like figuring stuff out where there is no obvious answer.âSo, while this does mean that your resume has less of an impact on your overall hiring, it means that within your next job interview - you should focus on how you can put your hard-earned skills to use for the company. Keep the focus on your skills and youâll go far.âThereâs just so much talent to be had if people are open to finding this talent in different places,â Weiner said.This post originally appeared on Fairygodboss.
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