format you submit your resume?

randomlinh

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
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linh.wordpress.com
I was in another thread and someone mentioned their industry only accepts .doc formatted resumes (and I would presume paper ones.. heh).

I find that incredible. Why not PDF? It's a standard, and even before, it can't get accidentally edited.

Does anyone's place of employment have these kind of "only one format" policies? If so, what industry is it (or specific company if you feel so inclined)?

 

erikistired

Diamond Member
Sep 27, 2000
9,739
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my resume is in l33t txt format. mostly because i haven't had to submit it for quite a long time.
 

esun

Platinum Member
Nov 12, 2001
2,214
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Most companies I've dealt with take DOC or PDF, but some will only accept plaintext.
 

Rudee

Lifer
Apr 23, 2000
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76
My girlfriend used to be a recruiter and she tells me they hate receiving pdf's. Word doc it is.
 

JJChicken

Diamond Member
Apr 9, 2007
6,165
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Originally posted by: Rudee
My girlfriend used to be a recruiter and she tells me they hate receiving pdf's. Word doc it is.

SRS? I found pdf so much easier to open (im not in HR btw..) and look more professional
 

randomlinh

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
20,846
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linh.wordpress.com
Originally posted by: Rudee
My girlfriend used to be a recruiter and she tells me they hate receiving pdf's. Word doc it is.
other than it possibly being slow, was there a reason?

The only think I can think of now is they need to index everything, which would be a legitimate reason actually.
 

Leros

Lifer
Jul 11, 2004
21,867
7
81
Some of my professors have an amazing ability to turn a 100KB word document into a 2-5 MB pdf. Maybe that is why they don't like pdfs. The best was a 14MB 3 page long document. I pdfed the original .doc myself and got a ~150kb pdf.
 

AreaCode7O7

Senior member
Mar 6, 2005
931
1
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NEVER PDF.

Resumes often get dumped into applicant tracking systems that, for better or for worse, use plain text fields as the resume location. If you have a PDF resume (especially if it's an image PDF), they can't get your information in the field. This will prevent you from showing up in keyword searches, drastically reducing your chance of getting a call back.

I use RTF, personally. You want to avoid formatting, like Word tables, that will make your resume look extra-junky when dumped into plain text.

< used to be a recruiter
 

Canai

Diamond Member
Oct 4, 2006
8,016
1
0
Originally posted by: Barack Obama
Originally posted by: Rudee
My girlfriend used to be a recruiter and she tells me they hate receiving pdf's. Word doc it is.

SRS? I found pdf so much easier to open (im not in HR btw..) and look more professional

Holy fuck, troll is not a troll?!?

Wow.
 

acole1

Golden Member
Sep 28, 2005
1,543
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I have been looking for jobs lately and noticed that most the companies do ask for .DOC only. I thought it was a bit strange too, as I would have assumed that PDF was the way to go... but I guess not.

Good luck on your job search!! :beer:
 

xeemzor

Platinum Member
Mar 27, 2005
2,599
1
71
I use latex for my resumes, so it's natural to submit it as a pdf. Using latex I'm able to achieve better formatting more easily than if I had used word.
 

Capt Caveman

Lifer
Jan 30, 2005
34,543
651
126
Originally posted by: AreaCode707
NEVER PDF.

Resumes often get dumped into applicant tracking systems that, for better or for worse, use plain text fields as the resume location. If you have a PDF resume (especially if it's an image PDF), they can't get your information in the field. This will prevent you from showing up in keyword searches, drastically reducing your chance of getting a call back.

I use RTF, personally. You want to avoid formatting, like Word tables, that will make your resume look extra-junky when dumped into plain text.

< used to be a recruiter

Winnar!
 

soydios

Platinum Member
Mar 12, 2006
2,708
0
0
pdf@koolwire.com turned my 41KB .doc resume into a 16KB .pdf with text selection enabled (got the summer job too, w00t). I'll keep that in mind about the .doc thing in mind in the future, though. simple text with no fancy formatting.

/laugh about LaTeX. learned how to use that for a class. I'll use it to write an obscenely long paper, but not anything else.