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    The 10 Worst Things to Put on Your Resume

According to a 2010 Accountemps survey, 28% of executives say the resume is where most job seekers make mistakes in the application process. But what exactly constitutes a mistake?

We talked with career coaches and resume writers to find ten gaffes that will guarantee that your resume never makes it past round one.

1. Unnecessary Details About Your Life

There are a few personal details you should include on a resume: full name and contact information, including email, phone number and address. But beyond that, personal details should be kept to a minimum. If the prospective employer wants to know more than the minimum, they will ask you or figure it out for themselves.

"Your age, race, political affiliation, anything about your family members, and home ownership status should all be left off your resume," says Ann Baehr, a certified professional resume writer and president of New York-based Best Resumes. "What's confusing is that [a lot of personal information is] included on international CVs. In the U.S., including [personal data] is a no-no because it leaves the job-seeker open to discrimination."

The exception to the rule: If you're looking to work for an organization closely tied to a cause, you may consider including your race, political party, or religious beliefs.

"Personal data may suggest a bias, unless what you want to do next is directly tied to one of those categories, because it shows aligned interest," says Roy Cohen, a New York City career coach and author of "The Wall Street Professional's Survival Guide." So, unless you're looking to work for a religious, political, or social organization, you're better off keeping personal philosophies to yourself.

2. Your Work Responsibilities as a Lifeguard When You Were 16 ...

"Don't include information that will not advance you in your work goals," says Rena Nisonoff, president of The Last Word, a resume-writing and job-coaching company in Boston. "Anything extraneous should be left off your resume." That includes hobbies and irrelevant jobs you held many years ago.

Unless you're an undergraduate student or a freshly minted professional, limit your work history to professional experience you've had in the past 10 to 15 years (or greater, if it was a C-level position).

3. A Headshot

8 Comments

leave your comment if you like it ...have a look my be you have written somthing wrong in ur resume.....

23 months ago

ya its true....

23 months ago

Hi!! I think its a wonderful way to reach out to many through your blog. Its very informative and am so very sure that it would help out many. Nice share. God Bless

23 months ago

Very true Rina..no wonder he is on Top list of India;) very informative post. I agree, with all the noted point. I had interviwed few ppl in my previous work place ,, there some ppl whose not prepare to wat to talk and wat not to talk. Any how some ppl littrally talk bad about their previous employee...

23 months ago

Great Post !

23 months ago

Thanks noor and henry u,,,

23 months ago

That is true..Very nice information, Thanks for sharing!

23 months ago