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Congratulations to the class of 2025. Toss your caps in the air. Rejoice that cramming all night for finals have come to an end.

Now attention turns to landing that elusive first job. This is a tough one. When it comes to entry-level jobs in the communications industry, the supply-and-demand equation tilts toward the employer. The unpredictable economy doesn’t exactly help the situation.

Still, there are jobs to be had.

While commencement speakers will pontificate about “making a difference” and “following your passion,” don’t lose sight of the importance of differentiation. In short, why should a company hire you over your colleagues with their faces pressed against the window? Right, desperation is not a good look.

With this in mind, I offer guidance on how to differentiate through your resume and cover letter —

 

Dear College Grad,

Congrats.

You’re now ready for that first job. Before flinging your resume to and fro, some words of guidance.

Don’t follow the Resume 101 Handbook. Let me say this again because it’s so damn important. Do not follow the Resume 101 Handbook.

It will result in a bloated resume that blends into the background. Why universities, an environment that revels in sticking it to the man, support an approach that cranks out vanilla resumes is beyond me.

So how should you write a resume?

For starters, do not pull from the lexicon of resumes. Phrases such as “hard-working,” “team player,” “think outside the box,” “detail-oriented” and “strategic thinking” carry the weight of freeze-dried kale. The perfect way to avoid this pitfall is to ask five buddies for their resumes, highlight the words that keep appearing and avoid those words.

Two, apply a conversational tone to your copy. Read the copy out loud. Your ear will tell you whether it sounds conversational or stiff as plywood. This improvement alone will lift your resume.

Now comes the big one. This is how you grab the the prospective employer by the scruff of the neck.

Share a window into yourself. What do you care about? What inspires you? When did you face a little adversity? Or a lot?

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This goes back to high school English and the teacher stressing “show, don’t tell.” In other words, don’t tell me you’re creative. Show me a part of you that leads me to conclude that you’re creative.

I know it’s tough to open up this way. Be brave. You can do it. This same approach should also carry your cover letter where you’ve got even more opportunity to hit emotional touch points.

Finally, at the risk of going cliché on you, be honest.

If your work experience consists of flipping burgers, don’t describe this on the resume as hospitality beef specialist. Prospective employers recognize that you’re applying for your first job after graduating from college. Your experience flipping burgers can be a positive, again using it as a window to accentuate the type of person you are.

One final point on the cover letter —

The more you can align your cover letter with the prospective employer, the better. This means doing your homework to understand the company’s culture, brand, successes, etc.  Don’t only read the website. Check out the blog posts. Read news stories on the company. Review the content on its social feeds. The payoff comes in by being able to align your narrative with what the company values.

Look, even with a resume and cover letter that stand out, it can take some time to land that first job. Don’t get discouraged. Though it was many (many) years ago, I still remember not being able to give myself away to land that first job … literally.

Persistence and determination and opening up will win the day.

Good luck!

Lou Hoffman Signature

Lou

 


Comments

  • Some Dude

    It’s that time of year again.
    Yep. Provide reality therapy to new College Grads who have read Ishmael’s Positive Approach.
    Here goes:
    +++++++++++++++

    Hansel & Gretel didn’t just end up living, “Happily Ever After.”
    They had challenges. And solutions.
    = Every good story has a beginning, middle and end.
    What’s yours?

    Cut the hype. Lose the buzz words.
    You say, “robust.” I say “Wadded shot for the garbage can.” (He shoots. He scores).

    Play an Accordion: Go to jail.
    Use AI: see above.

    Short. Sentences. Work.
    Keep it succinct.
    And interesting.

    Build a narrative.
    The great author/producer Jerry Weissman penned: “Tell ‘em what you’re going to tell ‘em. Tell ‘em. Tell ‘em what you told ‘em.”

    We don’t really care about you. Sorry. We’re kinda’ busy doing work.
    So, give us the why.
    Why you? Why now? Why not be a Ski Bum?

    Have confidence. You’re probably better than you think.
    But don’t think you’re entitled to anything.

    The people here also worked hard. And they made mistakes.
    Can you roll with that?

    Wrap it up for us.

    Oh, and one last thing: We don’t care how technical you are. It’s all about service.
    One more: And listening.
    Still more: And having a smile.

    You can do it.
    Go make a difference.

    Reply

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