CVs
Learn to impress with a snazzy CV.
Article by : SpunOut.ie
Your CV (Curriculum Vitae) and cover letter are usually the first impression that a company or organisation gets of you, so they have got to be perfect. That means knowing how to make your achievements shine!
- CVs give basic information about you, your education, work experience, skills and achievements.
- Cover letters explain why you want the job and what makes you the right person for it.
CV sussed
- Keep it simple. Print the CV in blank ink on white A4 sized paper. You want it to be your achievements that stand out, not your use of bright pink paper!
- Use a clear, easy to read letter font like Arial or Times New Roman.
- Don't try to put everything about yourself into the CV. Stick to two pages of the most relevant and important info: potential bosses don't want to know about the Irish dancing medal you won when you were six!
- Start with your name and contact details at the top so that they're easy to see.
- Make sure to include your date of birth, education, qualifications, relevant jobs and work experience, achievements and interests that help prove you've got the right skills for the job.
- Don't include (unless you're asked) gender, info on your children, a photo, if you're married or not, state of health, nationality or reasons why you left other jobs.
- Change your CV for each job you apply for. Look carefully at the job description and emphasise the skills or experience mentioned.
- If you're asked for referees, include a past employer, teacher or sports coach. Make sure to ask that person if they will give you a reference. If you're not asked write 'References available on request' at the end of your CV.
- Read over the finished CV a few times and make sure there are no spelling mistakes.
CV language
- Keep sentences short, sharp and positive. Like “Developed training manual for new employees” or “Gained valuable experience in team-leading and problem solving”.
- Make sure your CV is up to date. There’s no need to include information that’s more than five years old, unless it’s relevant to the job you’re applying for.
- Use bullet points to list your duties, skills and achievements in recent jobs.
- Don’t include useless information just to fill space. Nobody wants to search through all the part-time jobs you had in the last 10 years!
- Keep your CV positive and make sure to highlight your achievements.
- Don't lie about your experience and skills: you’ll get caught out eventually!
Still stuck? FAS provides a CV template. Click here to use it.
Further Information:
CV Cafe
CV Cafe Blog
GradIreland
Skool.ie
NUIM Careers



