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Address
Positions
by ResumeEdge.com -
The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
People must
be able to locate you, but your address and phone number are
some of the least important marketing details on a résumé.
Some managers spend only a few seconds perusing a résumé and
might get through the first third of it, if you are lucky.
The reader's eyes should be drawn immediately to the things
that will motivate him or her to read all the way to the bottom.
However,
you don't want to make the reader work too hard when it comes
time to make that critical call for an interview! You should
make the address section part of the overall design of the
résumé so it doesn't detract from the text, much as you did
with your name, but keep it in an easy-to-find location. That
can be done by placing the address(es) either at the top or
the bottom of the résumé.
Two addresses,
a current and permanent, are often needed when a person is
still in school or will be moving in a few months. Presenting
them at the top sometimes creates design problems and requires
a bit of imagination (Sample
1). Placing two addresses at the bottom is often easier.
An address
at the top of the résumé should be made part of the design
so that the reader's eyes easily skip over it to begin reading
the text. Graphic lines are particularly useful in this case
(Sample
1), and so is the judicious use of italics (Sample
1).
Matching
lines at the bottom of a résumé sometimes help to create a
sense of balance so the résumé is not top heavy (Sample
1). The address can be centered under or between the line(s)
(Sample
1), made to follow the same format as the text of the résumé (Sample
1), or tab aligned (Sample
1).
If you have
an e-mail address, always include it on your résumé. The same
goes for your Web page address if you have a portfolio online.
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