12 Comments
 

Be careful, using a standard b-school resume format can get you in trouble. At many schools (HBS for example), the resume almost instantly identifies that candidate as an HBS student because of the unusual formatting (lower case letters, etc).

 

Good link above. The reason I used the Chicago one is because it clearly separates all the sections and looks neat and organized. Many U of Chicago GSB graduates have seem my resume and none said anything about it, so I would suggest using these formats, since they can really help you. And in case you are really worried about it, change some minor formatting details, font, size, and then, it's not really their template anymore. And I don't know if you noticed, all those resumes looked very similar to me....

 

I don't understand why anybody would want their resume to look like a chicago GSB resume as listed on that page, unless they were submitting that resume to academia, especially if they were coming out of an undergraduate program. If you're an undergraduate, I was under the impression that you wanted to have a single page resume that had a distinct focus on important work experience and skills: you also want to go into some level of depth about what you did at your previous job.

Or am I missing something?

 
gkaI don't understand why anybody would want their resume to look like a chicago GSB resume as listed on that page, unless they were submitting that resume to academia, especially if they were coming out of an undergraduate program. If you're an undergraduate, I was under the impression that you wanted to have a single page resume that had a distinct focus on important work experience and skills: you also want to go into some level of depth about what you did at your previous job.

Or am I missing something?

Yes, you looked at the wrong link

 

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