Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should have a fairly up-to-date resume if you are a grown-up who might at some point need to get a job. The point isn't just having the resume, it's writing the resume, looking at jobs you might want, thinking about the gaps in your resume, and being intentional about remedying them. This is a good exercise to engage in periodically.
For those of us who have the job we want it’s a pointless exercise. When a job opens up that I am interested in I write a resume for that job framing and highlighting the experience relevant to that job.
At any given point you should be employable in case you need to leave or you're let go.
Or not.
At the point they need a new job, they would write a resume, moron.
Anonymous wrote:Wow what a limited point of view. I have been in the same federal position for 23 years since graduating law school, constantly learning new areas of the law and feel very successful. Nailed my dream job from the beginning, why would I have had a resume before this chaos?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should have a fairly up-to-date resume if you are a grown-up who might at some point need to get a job. The point isn't just having the resume, it's writing the resume, looking at jobs you might want, thinking about the gaps in your resume, and being intentional about remedying them. This is a good exercise to engage in periodically.
For those of us who have the job we want it’s a pointless exercise. When a job opens up that I am interested in I write a resume for that job framing and highlighting the experience relevant to that job.
At any given point you should be employable in case you need to leave or you're let go.
Or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You should have a fairly up-to-date resume if you are a grown-up who might at some point need to get a job. The point isn't just having the resume, it's writing the resume, looking at jobs you might want, thinking about the gaps in your resume, and being intentional about remedying them. This is a good exercise to engage in periodically.
For those of us who have the job we want it’s a pointless exercise. When a job opens up that I am interested in I write a resume for that job framing and highlighting the experience relevant to that job.
Anonymous wrote:You should have a fairly up-to-date resume if you are a grown-up who might at some point need to get a job. The point isn't just having the resume, it's writing the resume, looking at jobs you might want, thinking about the gaps in your resume, and being intentional about remedying them. This is a good exercise to engage in periodically.
Anonymous wrote:You should have a fairly up-to-date resume if you are a grown-up who might at some point need to get a job. The point isn't just having the resume, it's writing the resume, looking at jobs you might want, thinking about the gaps in your resume, and being intentional about remedying them. This is a good exercise to engage in periodically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who do we imagine is looking through every IRS employee's resume? i think that is the bigger issue. Feels like I waste of time. Like the weekly 5 bullets. It is not hard or time consuming but there is no purpose.
Right! Absolutely no purpose whatsoever for a remainder of life spent unemployed.
Even unemployment benefits require one to be seeking employment. Hard to make a case you are doing that with no resume.
Anonymous wrote:Who do we imagine is looking through every IRS employee's resume? i think that is the bigger issue. Feels like I waste of time. Like the weekly 5 bullets. It is not hard or time consuming but there is no purpose.