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But while the resume of two pages (or more) may be rising, the one-pager isn't yet dead. People with less than five years' work history never need a second page, recruiters agree (though some ...
Here’s the deal with resume length: Some recruiters do not want to see a resume longer than one page, especially not from someone who is still in college. Others don’t care.
Conventional wisdom says a one-page resume is the best bet for job seekers, but that may no longer be the case.
Two-page resumes are common now, so if you’ve been agonizing over how to stick to one page, agonize no longer. However, there’s one big exception to this, and that’s if you have only a few ...
According to Arts Jr. mid-career and executive-level professionals can have a resume longer than one page. Your resume is the foundation of your job search.
But new research from ResumeGo has blown this out of the water: recruiters are actually nearly 2.3 times more likely to prefer two-page resumes over one-page resumes.
The job seeker’s gospel commands that a résumé fit on a single page. It’s time to rethink that tenet as artificial intelligence screens more job applications.