The document summarizes research on how recruiters view online profiles and resumes. It finds that recruiters make initial "fit or no fit" decisions within 6 seconds based primarily on a candidate's name, current/previous titles, companies, and dates of employment. Recruiters spend little time looking at other details. The document then proposes using a visual CV (infographic resume) to tell a candidate's story in a more engaging way that stands out and increases the chances of getting noticed by recruiters. Examples of effective visual CVs are provided, along with tips for creating one to help data science students find jobs.
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Visual CVs
1. BAI Case Study Group 7
Visual CV
BHARATHIPRASATH S
SHERI MIRIAM JOHN
MADHUMITHA PRIYADARSHINI R
MELKEY ANAND A
3. Introduction
The Ladders study used a scientific technique called "eye tracking" on 30 professional recruiters and examined
their eye movements during a 10-week period to "record and analyze where and how long someone focuses
when digesting a piece of information or completing a task.
Argument: some types of online profiles are significantly less efficient than others when recruiters are
searching for qualified candidates.
According to The Ladders research
Recruiters tend to follow a consistent visual path when reviewing both resumes and online profiles
Advertisements, pictures and calls-to-action created clutter that reduced recruiters ability to process the
profiles. Such visual elements reduced recruiters analytical capability and hampered decision-making. [19%
of the total time spent on profile pictures]
Recruiters spend an average of six seconds before they make the initial 'fit or no fit' decision on candidates.
Ref: What Recruiters Look At During The 6 Seconds They Spend On Your Resume
4. What Recruiters Look For
1. The recruiters spent almost 80% of their resume review time on the following elements:
- Candidate's name
- Current title/company
- Previous title/company
- Previous position start and end dates
- Current position start and end dates
- Education
2. Beyond those six, recruiters did little more than scan for keywords to match the open position.
3. Because "fit/no-fit" decisions were based mostly on those six pieces of data, an individual resumes
detail and explanatory copy had little impact on the initial decision-making.
Ref: Eye-Tracking Study: How Recruiters View Resumes
5. Heat map of
Recruiters' eye
movements on
Resume
Ref: What Recruiters Look At During The 6 Seconds They
Spend On Your Resume
7. Problem statement
1. Job applicant to find data scientist jobs
H0 : Data science students are not getting the right job with the current CV.
H1 : Data science students are getting the right job with the current CV.
2. Time taken by HR to scan a CV
H0 : HR faces difficulties in taking better decisions
H1 : HR doesnt face difficulties in taking better decisions
10. If a candidate sent you an infographic resume
(via email or social media), would you look at
it?
100 percent of hiring managers said yes
50 percent of inside recruiters/HR said yes
83 percent of third-party recruiters said yes
64 percent of other respondents said yes
Back in 2013 most hiring entities wouldnt even consider
an infographic (or non-traditional) resume. But in early
2015, 68 percent of respondents said they would look at
one if emailed or sent via social media.
Ref: Go Ahead. Use An Infographic Resume
11. Principles of Data storytelling
Ref: Data Storytelling: The
Essential Data Science Skill
Everyone Needs
13. CV Evaluation Criteria
1. Know your audience - Companys having HR data related Problem
2. Relate your role and the industry HR Data Analyst. Service industry
3. Put yourself in their story Understand their business and HR functions
4. Make it readable Visual CV with data, graphs and charts
5. Provide a feedback mechanism Contact details
Ref: Data Storytelling
21. Challenges
1. Infographic resume may be perceived as less professional.
2. Not all jobs are suited to infographic resumes. Many employers require traditional resumes
because thats what theyre used to and expect. Some employers may use an Applicant Tracking
System that scans and looks for keywords to measure the applicants fit to the job. That type of
scanning doesnt work with infographics, which means youre resume would be weeded out.
3. Not all employers are open to infographic resumes. Traditions die hard. There is a difference
between differentiating yourself and being annoyingly clever.
4. Using too many colours and shapes can be just as distracting as using more than one font and
a variety of formatting options on a traditional resume.
5. Candidate management systems aren't yet built for trendy, and you need your resume to be
easily input into an HR department or placement agency's system.
Ref: The Pros and Cons of Infographic Resumes
22. Video Resume
Video resumes are very unique.
Main objective: to helps job seeker to get recruiters attention and his curiosity will definitely
increase.
Sorting through video resumes is more efficient than scanning paper resumes.
Ref: The Pros and Cons of Video Resumes
33. Call to Action
Start creating Visual CV
Tools that can be used:
Piktochart
VisualCV.com
Canva.com
Infograph.venngage.com
Vizualize.me
Resumeup
Ref: DataScientist_resume_sample
34. Lessons Learned
Visual CV increases the chances of getting better job for better salary package.
Data Storytelling help us to say our story in better way.
Apart from Visual CV, we also learned how video and other innovative cv help job seeker to
reach the recruiters in a faster way.
Now recruiters also started preferring infographic resume rather than traditional paper resume.
Visual CV helps job seekers to standout from the crowd.
Say Bye to Traditional CV,
Go Visual and Get Visible!!!