You are trying to figure out how to update your resume. It's been way too long since you've had to do it (most "experts" recommend at least twice a year) and now you are worried that maybe your skills aren't marketable in this day and age.

Well if you have job experience, then you have experience that employers need! In the age of technology, typing now translates to keyboarding, filing can be adapted to spreadsheets and begin able to answer the phone properly seems to be a dying art. You can put all of these items on the resume, it's just a matter of re-wording your "old" job items into something that translates into the modern lexicon.

First examine your past employment history and try to remember EVERYTHING that you did at each job, not matter how menial it seems. Now, change the job duties or tasks into action verbs. Don't say for example "took care of" instead, use "coordinated. This sounds like you managed a group activity instead of a menial task. See how much more impressive that was? It's also the honest to goodness truth as well.

Start looking for way to use these types of words when describing your past experience. Other examples are delegated (meaning you oversaw a group), established (meaning you did it first) and interfaced (meaning you worked well with another group). Can you see what we're trying to do here? It's out with the old style verbs and in with the new.

The skill set is already there, just update it a little bit and you are good to go! Also, when writing your job objective, use keywords targeted for the new position. Simply read the job posting and sprinkle in some of their keywords on your resume. Gets them every time. Good luck!

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