Saturday, March 14, 2020

Hospitality Resume That Sparkles

Its Time to Create a Restaurant/Hospitality Resume That SparklesOne of the challenges associated with creating a hospitality resume is making sure that it zeros in on the position youre applying for while highlighting the many skills you bring to the table, especially when some may step outside of the realm of the job.If youre applying for a job in the restaurant sector but have training in a broader array of industries within hospitality, you may be scratching your head trying to figure out how to fit it all in. Dont fret. There is a way to create a great document that can showcase it all.Use Your Job Target as a GuideA great way to not only lure a hiring manager into reading your resume, but also guide them through the document to know which skills and qualifications to look for, is by creating an eye-catching job target. The job target is similar to the subject line of an e-mail or the title of an article in that it provides insight into what the reader can expect.In this case, wr iting a target that zeros in on your skills acquired while working in restaurants but also mentions other experience in the hospitality field tells the manager that you bring both types of experience to the table. An example of this type of target might be Head Waiter with 10 Years Extensive Team Management, Sales and Customer Service Experience Trained in Expanded Hospitality Services.This target not only explains that you are highly skilled in managing a team, handling sales, and dealing with customers, but you have a background in other areas of hospitality that will encourage the manager to look through your resume to see how else you can be an asset to the company.Dig Deeper With Your Career SummaryNow that your job target has served as the tip of the iceberg, hopefully convincing the hiring manager to read more about you, you can go into further details about your background in your career summary.The career summary provides you with the opportunity to highlight moments that s tand out in your hospitality career. You can bullet-point your highlighted moments as a head waiter by sharing some great achievements, individual or team awards won, record number of customers served, etc.This can also be a distribution policy to expand on your hospitality skills as long as they show that you will be a better head waiter thanks to those skills. For instance, you if spent two years as a hotel management trainee who took responsibility for the cooking staff, you can highlight this as well.Its great to have expanded experience in the hospitality field. The key is to make sure that you focus on the job youre applying for and only sliding the other details in when they suit the position. Otherwise, your resume will look more like a cluttered document than an accomplishment-packed masterpiece.For additional tips and advice on resumes and cover letters, follow us on Twitter GreatResume or visit our blog.

Tuesday, March 10, 2020

Parenting Books 7 Titles Moms Should Read Before Returning to Work

Parenting Books 7 Titles Moms Should Read Before Returning to Work The working mom is many things a parent, a professional, and a woman.Each role is unique yet demanding. Managing all threeoften at the same timerequires a delicate balance, as well as advice and support, inspiration, and strategies to manage the demands of a hectic schedule.Thats wherbeie these seven parenting books and important guides come in. Before you head back to work, and even if youve already returned to the office, these parent guides and books for keeping a positive parenting-working life balance will provide a fresh perspective on how to juggle careers, children, and all of lifes demands.Bringing up Bb One American Mother Discovers the Wisdom of French ParentingBy Pamela DruckermanLess of a parenting advice manual and more of a story, Pamela Druckermans Bringing Up Bb is a witty tale of an American woman giving birth to and raising her first child in France. Through each of her stories, the author explores the French perspective on raising children who are polite, eat their vegetables, and sleep through the night. We also get a glimpse into the lives of French working mothers, who seem to have less guilt and more time to enjoy lifes simple pleasures than American mothers seem to do.Work Pump Repeat The New Moms Survival Guide to Breastfeeding and Going Back to WorkBy Jessica ShortallReturning to work as a breastfeeding mom is not for the faint of heart. With heavy doses of humor and absolutely no judgements, Pump Work Repeat is a survival guide that empowers working moms with new babies with stories from the trenches, hacks, and strategies to make pumping at work, on airplanes, and in between meetings easier. Jessica Shortall shares her personal experiences and those of hundreds of other working moms who have pumped at work. There are also plenty of practical tools like a conversation guide to share yur plans to pump at work with your manager.No Regrets Parenting Turning Long Days and Short Years into Cherished Moments With Your KidsBy Harley A. RotbartWe only have 24 hours in a day. No Regrets Parenting helps busy parents make the most of their time with their children. Reframining the idea of quality time, this guide offers time management strategies and parenting advice that turn the mundane, exhausting routines of parenthood into opportunities to intimately and meaningfully connect with your kids.The Pie Life A Guilt-free Recipe for Success and SatisfactionBy Samantha EttusThe Pie Life rethinks work-life balance. No longer a two-sided scale where work sits in gegenseite to life and time with families, Samantha Ettus reenvisions the balance by imagining it in the shape of a pie. The book offers ways to nurture each of seven areas, or slices of a pie, to sustain a thriving personal and professional life. To bring lessons to life, the author shares the personal stories of hundreds of women, including Shonda Rhimes, Gayle King, Sallie Krawcheck and more.The MomS hift Women Share their Stories of Career Success After Having ChildrenBy Reva SethThe myth that having families destroys careers persists. It can leave even the most optimistic working mom fearful that career success is a thing of the past, and believe that good parenting is not compatible with professional life. Not so. The MomShift explores the experiences of working mothers who achieved more success in the months and years after having children. The stories arent glamorous by any means, but they are remarkable. Depicting the demanding schedules and other challenges women face at work and as parents, these real-life experiences also show us what is possible when we negotiate the terms of balance and let go of guilt.Drop the Ball Achieving More By Doing LessBy Tiffany DufuThe dream of having it all at some point shifted into doing it all for too many working mothers. Such welches the case with Tiffany Dufu, who realized her life was unmanageable as she tried to balance her growing career while raising two children and being a good wife to her partner. Drop the Ball describes the changes Tiffany made to create a more manageable life for herself. The book offers a mix of strategic frameworks and practical tactics that will free working moms of the unrealistic expectations that we (and others) place upon us.The Gifts of Imperfection Let Go of Who You Think Youre Supposed To Be and Embrace Who You AreBy Bren BrownFamed social work researcher Bren Brown schools readers on how to stop spending our lives trying to fulfill someone elses expectations about who we are supposed to be, what we are supposed to do, and what we are supposed to want. Instead, she offers us 10 guideposts that help us build the courage, compassion, and connection we need to be who we really are, all the while embracing our imperfections and recognizing that we are enough just as we are.BONUS Novels of fictionThere are plenty of books analyzing niche parenting style subjects and good parenting skills, as well as topics related to mothers who work, but you can also learn about parenting styles and receive other kinds of advice by reading fiction. Novels can give you the perspective you need to be a more empathetic, reasonable, and open-minded parent, colleague, leader, partner, friend, and so much more. Reading is also a great stress reliever. So, before you head back to work, get into the habit of reading (or listening to) novels regularly.Lisa Durante is committed to helping working mothers thrive. She offers working moms training and resources to help them manage the transitions that come with parenthood. She also consults companies to better manage and support employees through parental transitions.