International talent management strategist Dorothy Dalton recently wrote a compelling blog post: “The Hard Truth About Soft Skills,” which absolutely nails the value of soft skills – along with storytelling – in a quality resume.
Dalton describes how resumes that come to her attention are often based on the “high incidence of hard skills,” but goes on to assert that “… unless the resume or professional profile tells an engaging story, the chances of the phone being picked up are slim.”
She continues to describe how articulating your success stories verbally is crucial to being able to continue through the hiring process, underscoring that “it is imperative to bring clarity and show coherence around your career story as early as possible.”
Don’t Let Your Resume Be Ambushed by Less Important Details
So many resume writing blog posts focus on things like the demise of the Objective statement, formatting dos and don’ts, differences between the resume and your LinkedIn profile, whether or not to use color, charts or graphs and so on.
The problem with these types of messages is that careerists get mired in those details to the extent it ambushes their thinking from the most foundational issue: how and why they do what they do and why that matters to the target company.
This relates to the what’s-in-it-for-me message that hiring decision-makers seek, but it goes even deeper. It requires a sprawling reach into your career story, examining chapter-by-chapter things like your relationships with and influence toward bosses, clients, vendors and all other stakeholders.
Beware the Ineffectiveness of Random Soft Skills
These soft skills often are omitted or, if included, thrown in randomly and ineffectively, resulting in an incoherent story.
Soft Skills Make Your Career Incorporating soft skills articulately means describing how you helped tame heated meetings and how your ability to communicate orally or in writing helped forge alliances, influence solidarity, move projects and achieved bottom-line goals.
In fact, your soft skills probably were most heavily relied upon when you first started your job.
For each new position, you’ve either taken over after someone voluntarily left or was fired and therefore replaced an employee who was succeeding or who had failed. Perhaps even, you were recruited to pave the way for a new position. Whatever the case, you faced challenges to repair brokenness, expand on success, open new marketplace roadways – and so on.
Soft Skills Drive Hard Results
The common thread is that, unless you are a robot, you didn’t just bulldoze your way in and mechanically drive results. Instead, you began by applying softer skills in order to achieve more concrete outcomes. Those softer skills encompassed:
Analysis—assessing current situations
Collaboration—working to understand teammates’ or employees’ frustrations, areas of satisfaction and fears so you could more meaningfully contribute
Composure—proving that you are composed, despite an unfamiliar, new environment often wrought with jealous, distrusting employees who may see you as a threat
Listening—showing, through responsive action that you heard and worked to understand what was requested; and the list goes on
Bottom line: Peppering your resume with metrics and outcomes is great, but not at the sacrifice of the softer skills and initiatives that deftly pull the threads together to achieve those hard-hitting outcomes.
It’s as much about the back-story, replete with the how and why you performed the way you did and the intricate relationship weaving, influencing, analyzing, listening, innovating, change driving, negotiating and global communications, as it is about the result.
Differentiate Yourself By Doing the “Hard Yards”
Why careerists do not prepare their story this way is multifold, but probably the primary reason is a “lack of self-insights.” Says Dalton, using a timely football analogy: “They simply don’t do the hard yards and take the time to look into their own careers. It’s a lot of work, and probably the most significant career management exercise, anyone will do. Ever.”
However, those careerists who get it and are willing to delve into introspection needed to write an effective resume story generally out-compete others in the market.
via Soft Skills and Storytelling: Keys to a Quality Resume | The Savvy Intern by YouTern.
Soft Skills and Storytelling: Keys to a Quality Resume