I gotta negotiate with these dudes first. They low balling me with their offer
I gotta negotiate with these dudes first. They low balling me with their offer
lemme get some tixs twin
@op
Congrats on the job and also on getting to work with the best baseball team in history. Love to see a fellow georgia boy succeed.
Also i am interested in how recruiters/employers accessed that resume. Did you send or attach it to your profile on an aggregate site (ex: indeed) and then employers actually opened it to look at? Or did you email it as a link/attachment? It looks designed in the same way as a personal promo site but did you export it from Canva as a PDF or something?
I've never seen a resume like that outside of personal marketing webpages. Dont get me wrong, it's really nice and im sure it made you stand out.
Im just curious about how it got to employers and they responded to it, because i work for one of the biggest hospitals in the world and interview a lot of job applicants for my dept, and 90% of resumes i see are standard white page, black text with typical formatting — the other 10% are the same except with colored accent bars or little design elements that make it a little different (or just Microsoft Word preset templates).
I know from using my hospital's recruiting portal that there's a chance a resume formatted like yours might not even get through to be reviewed by someone like me due to the format — which is a shame. Our IS team wont let us open most outside links so if you sent that to us via link in an email we probably couldnt view it. So im wondering if you ever ran into any trouble during your job hunt with employers saying something to you about having trouble accessing it or anything?
Btw ive never heard of that Canva site you used to design it but it looks like something worth checking out, so thanks for linking it
Canva fire af. Started getting interviews when I designed my CV using a template on there. Even had someone I know ask me to design her CV when she saw mine
I gotta negotiate with these dudes first. They low balling me with their offer
Sports franchises low ball cause they know people wanna work for them. But it's an awesome opportunity regardless
Btw I’m a huge braves fan and be in the battery like all the time so that’s dope af to see someone on here getting a big gig like that
Btw I’m a huge braves fan and be in the battery like all the time so that’s dope af to see someone on here getting a big gig like that
The Battery is an amazing place. I was able to see it for the first time really, in that it’s a community generating from the stadium. Really cool stuff. Baseball stadiums have always been the most righteous. So it’s cool to see how they’ve evolved over the years.
Congrats @titoninetyfour . Phillies still gonna kick y’all ass.
Canva fire af. Started getting interviews when I designed my CV using a template on there. Even had someone I know ask me to design her CV when she saw mine
I'm not going to be looking for a new job any time soon, but definitely keeping that site in mind in case something happens and I have to leave. Also gonna see if it would be nice for designing dept policies and project procedures
@op congrats on completing ur costanza arc
good s***, hope it’s a great experience
that creative portfolio actually tuff i think it definitely works for a place that goes hand in hand with hosting events that you showcase
@op
Congrats on the job and also on getting to work with the best baseball team in history. Love to see a fellow georgia boy succeed.
Also i am interested in how recruiters/employers accessed that resume. Did you send or attach it to your profile on an aggregate site (ex: indeed) and then employers actually opened it to look at? Or did you email it as a link/attachment? It looks designed in the same way as a personal promo site but did you export it from Canva as a PDF or something?
I've never seen a resume like that outside of personal marketing webpages. Dont get me wrong, it's really nice and im sure it made you stand out.
Im just curious about how it got to employers and they responded to it, because i work for one of the biggest hospitals in the world and interview a lot of job applicants for my dept, and 90% of resumes i see are standard white page, black text with typical formatting — the other 10% are the same except with colored accent bars or little design elements that make it a little different (or just Microsoft Word preset templates).
I know from using my hospital's recruiting portal that there's a chance a resume formatted like yours might not even get through to be reviewed by someone like me due to the format — which is a shame. Our IS team wont let us open most outside links so if you sent that to us via link in an email we probably couldnt view it. So im wondering if you ever ran into any trouble during your job hunt with employers saying something to you about having trouble accessing it or anything?
Btw ive never heard of that Canva site you used to design it but it looks like something worth checking out, so thanks for linking it
I turn it in as a attachment or I link or in a notes section. It is most effective when I email the portfolio directly to a recipient.
I attach my portfolio along with a traditional resume, so I'm not sure who sees it unless they directly comment on it.
Good s*** @op