How to Handle Employment Gaps on Your Resume in 2024
Employment gaps are more common than ever — and more accepted. Learn the modern strategies for addressing them on your resume and in interviews with confidence.
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Employment gaps are more common than ever — and more accepted. Learn the modern strategies for addressing them on your resume and in interviews with confidence.
Small formatting errors can eliminate an otherwise strong resume from consideration. Identify and fix the most damaging resume formatting mistakes before your next application.
LinkedIn recommendations are one of the most underused job search tools. Here is a proven strategy for getting compelling endorsements that convert.
Ninety days is enough time to meaningfully close most professional skills gaps—if you're deliberate about how you spend the time.
The line between technical and non-technical roles is dissolving. Here are the digital skills that are now baseline expectations across almost every profession.
Stretch roles are won or lost in the cover letter. Here's how to make the case for yourself when your resume doesn't tell the whole story.
Your skills section is the most ATS-sensitive part of your resume. Small formatting choices can mean the difference between a callback and a rejection.
Feeling uncertain about your career direction is far more common than career advice acknowledges. Here is a practical framework for getting unstuck and choosing a direction with confidence.
The skills section is one of the most misused parts of a resume. Here is a complete guide to building a skills section that impresses ATS systems and human readers equally.
LinkedIn is still the most powerful professional networking platform available — but most job seekers use only a fraction of its capability. Here is how to use it strategically in 2024.
Most professional development goals are abandoned by February. Here is a framework for setting career goals that are specific enough to be actionable and flexible enough to last.
The one-page resume rule has been overstated for decades. Here is the honest truth about when two pages are not just acceptable — but actually better.
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