The debate of Video CV has been going on and when I read the latest article from Businessweek ( see at the end of this note.. feel tempted to share my thoughts
- Whether it is plain simple CV or online blog or a Video Resume , it should not be self praise brag but should mention the skillset that will benefit the Recruiter.
- Video CV does indeed give the first impact of making assessment. But should not be one of prepared reading out script. But rather having a professional interview in the Q/A format. Share the experience of the internship and your understanding of the industry. No need to mention the subjects and score in the study. That anyway in a Pdf file can be added.
- Should be professionally edited and not sit in front of the Web camera or Video Camera blabber out incoherently.
I had made a Q/A format for a candidate and since the job was for
Never push the CV till you know the prospective Recruiter and have researched well about them .. So that you mention of the skill that would make sense to them. Like today Google has advertised for fresher techie. Should you send a CV with CD where in you display the skill on your understanding of the programmes related algorithm and AJAX related and how the Search engine programming are done, you would be consider in the very first round itself.. There is bound to be clutter of CV for this advertisement. Just make a planned approach for the Google. Talk to me and would advise the tips of Video CV also on how to do the impact on the Recruiter.
With best wishes always
RK Dhanvada
Recruitment Consultant & CEO Coach
D & HR Consultants ,
rk@dhanvada.
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Talent hits a target no one else can hit;
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- Arthur Schopenhauer
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B-School News May 2, 2007, 5:24PM EST text size: TT
http://www.businessweek.com/bschools/content/may2007/bs20070502_090625.htm
Résumés in Motion
While traditional work histories still rule, the day may not be far off when video pitches become a standard supplement
A keyword search of "résumé" on the online video site YouTube turns up 5,180 results, including videos of everything from someone breaking into his boss's office to a young person who plays the piano and sings his own praises in the hopes of launching a career in public relations. With all the buzz around video résumés, the B-school student seeking that post-MBA job might think the paper résumé—or its online equivalent—is dead. But at least for this year's class of grads, the message is "think again."
Many career-placement directors at top B-schools are telling their students to steer clear of video altogether for now. The reason? While the YouTube generation—the so-called "Millennials" who were born after 1981—might be embracing video résumés, it's the Baby Boomers who are still doing most of the hiring. "Boomers aren't going to watch them," says Everette Fortner, director of career development at the
Business school career counselors are also wary because of the unprofessional tone of some videos. In the fall of 2006, Yale student Aleksey Vayner sent his video résumé, called "Impossible Is Nothing," to investment bank UBS, and the video quickly found its way to YouTube, where it was mocked, spoofed, and made Vayner the laughing-stock of Wall Street. The lengthy video, which had Vayner waxing poetic about life, breaking bricks with his hands, and dancing with a half-dressed woman, became the epitome of how not to do a video résumé. It has led some people—especially those in B-school—to shy away from the medium entirely.
A Sense of Presence
One of the résumés on YouTube belongs to Allen Ulbricht, a 2003 graduate of Georgia Tech's undergraduate management program, whose video has him dressed in business casual attire and responding—as naturally as possible—to likely questions for a Web 2.0 gig to which he was applying in December, 2006.
Now the owner of Real Nice Software, which creates custom software for small businesses, Ulbricht says he pulled himself out of the running for the job but is sure his video, an adjunct to his traditional online résumé, would have given him a leg up on the competition. Video will become an expected part of the job application, says Ulbricht, even if it will never replace traditional, written résumés.
Still in their infancy, video résumés have caught on with the creative and with other young people who want to show off their skills—either because of the visual impact or to make up for lack of work experience. "Video résumés animate a job seeker in ways that traditional paper media can't," says Mark Oldman, co-president of the career site Vault.com in
Old School Mastery
Recruiters are less resistant to videos than business-school administrators seem to think. In a recent Vault.com survey of employers, 31% of respondents said they would watch a video résumé if one was sent to them, and 58% said they might check out a video out of sheer curiosity. And many companies are using online-video technology to educate candidates about their culture and job openings, says Mareza Larizadeh, 2006 Stanford MBA graduate and co-founder and company president of Doostang, a social and professional networking site primarily for MBAs.
Many recruiters remain cautious, though. Cindy Fiedelman, vice-president of talent management at Avaya (AV), a company that designs, builds, and manages communications networks, says video is likely the way of the future, but first companies will have to create ways to standardize the material and ensure equal opportunity for all candidates. She adds that job applicants should first try to perfect the traditional résumé—show how much money you generated for the restaurant when you worked as a bartender instead of just writing that you poured drinks, for example—before moving on to video (see BusinessWeek.
Expert Guidelines
Although there are still no official rules about what a video résumé should look like, career sites are slowly creating standards. Internet job search service CollegeGrad.
Recently Vault hosted a contest for aspiring Wall Street analysts, who vied for a chance at a prestigious internship by creating a video résumé (see BusinessWeek.
Both sides of the argument about video résumés are using time as a major factor in the debate. Those in favor of video say employers can save time by using video to replace the first round of interviewing. Those against video say this new technology just adds another step to the initial search for candidates. They add that the written résumé allows human resources staff to do keyword searches and quickly eliminate applicants who don't meet minimum requirements.
Some experts say video résumés could invite lawsuits, because employers would be able to discriminate on the basis of race, gender, and ethnicity in the screening process. However discrimination can happen during the face-to-face interview too, says Char Bennington, senior associate director of career management at the Chicago Graduate School of Business. But
Supplementary Materials
Others argue the exact opposite, and say that video résumés are the only way that candidates, regardless of their geography and B-school, can open the gates of opportunity. "Video résumés level the playing field for those who aren't at the Stanfords or the Harvards by eliminating the need for robust on-campus recruiting," says Vault's Oldman.
Most experts agree that technology will continue to change the job application. The written, online résumé will survive because the keyword search is a convenient screening tool, but it will be joined by things like podcasts, online portfolios, and of course video (see BusinessWeek.
Michael Lawson, a professor of economics and the senior associate dean at the Boston University School of Management, envisions a multimedia résumé that would start with a one-page online document covering all the basics—from work experience to education—with hyperlinks to video and other relevant Web content. He and his colleagues are creating templates for such résumés now, and plan to share them with the next incoming class of MBA students.
Eventually, say some, video will enhance the online résumé. "I can't see my kid one day applying for a job with only a black-and-white piece of paper saying, 'This is the best representation of me,'" says Nick Murphy, operations manager of WorkBlast.com, which offers a video-résumé option to its job-seeking members. In other words, MBAs could soon be joining undergrads in making sure that their Web cam captures their good side.
Di Meglio is a reporter for BusinessWeek Online in
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