| How to Write for the Hiring Manager Writing for the hiring manager is key when it comes to making your resume stand out from all the rest.  We tell you how, because we are the hiring managers. 
 The hiring manager  is in his office. It’s 7 PM. It’s been a long day. He’s tired. He’s read 25  resumes in the last 10 minutes. He has 25 more resumes to scan before he goes  home. If he spots a good one he might give the candidate a call before leaving  the office.  Wouldn’t  you like to get that call?Typically hiring  managers scan through hundreds of resumes to find one or two candidates worth  interviewing. Then they might have to interview 10 or 20 people before finding  someone they want to hire. This means that for a typical position the hiring  manager may have to look at 500 resumes or more.  Your resume must fit what the hiring manager is looking forHe is tired of  being sent resumes where the job title does not even match the position he is  trying to fill. He is tired of slogging through poorly formatted and poorly  written resumes to figure out if the candidate is capable of doing the job. He  is looking for the resume where the candidate is a perfect fit.  Keep this  in mind as you write your resumeIf your resume  does not grab his attention in the first half-page, it ends up in the garbage  bin. If your resume gets his attention, he may read the rest of it and then  decide to contact you. The key  is the first half-page, which we call “above the fold.”The section above  the fold is the most important part of your resume so spend 80% of your time  and effort there.  But before we take  an in-depth look at the different parts of your resume, let’s take a look at  the best format for your resume. 
"How To Write The Perfect Resume,
A Resume Writing Guide, Complete With Resume Templates"
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