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RE: Resumes
Lotus is an all but dead format. Some people are shipping files in Word
but, due to the proliferation of viruses, most recipients are reluctant to
open them. A better choice would be Acrobat since the reader can be
downloaded for free and is platform independent.
Brian T. Vita, President
Cinema Service & Supply, Inc.
75 Walnut St. - Ste 4
Peabody, MA 01960-5691 USA
+1-978-538-7575 voice
+1-978-538-7550 fax
www.cssinc.com
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-boston-radio-interest@bostonradio.org
> [mailto:owner-boston-radio-interest@bostonradio.org] On
> Behalf Of Dave Faneuf
> Sent: Friday, March 07, 2003 12:00 PM
> To: steveord@bit-net.com
> Cc: boston-radio-interest@bostonradio.org
> Subject: Re: Resumes
>
>
> Actually something good has come of this already. I tried to
> attach my resume to two list members off list last night and
> they couldn't open it so I have already discovered something
> that needs my attention.....I always thought Lotus was the
> go-to format for business? df
>
>
> On Fri, 07 Mar 2003 07:00:26 -0500 SteveOrdinetz
> <steveord@bit-net.com>
> writes:
> > Dave Faneuf wrote:
> > >I was going over my resume tonight (NO, don't read anything into
> > that)
> > >and tweeked the format of it. I was wondering, I have been able
> > to
> > >condense 30 years in the biz onto a single sheet
> > >I would love to compare the style of resumes that get the attention
> > of
> > >mgmt. I know what works for me. Simple, one page give it
> your best
> > >shot...other ideas or examples on the topic?
> >
> > I've always been told that unless your career has been VERY
> > distinguished,
> > a resume should only reflect the last 10 yr. or so. Very few
> > employers are
> > interested in what you did 20+ yrs ago.
> >
> >
>