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Joining Google, Microsoft, Meta and many of the Tech giants is a strategic move in most people’s career journey. In this wide web world — this process can start in various ways…
My process started on a funny note —
One dull evening, I had a Google recruiter mail me directly. Weirdly or not so weirdly, I do not check my personal email daily and enjoy muting notifications on personal devices. So, the email sat in my inbox unopened for 2–3 days. Finally when I did open it in my own sweet time, I assumed it to be a phishing scam 😑, (in my defence, it was right before the era of Great Transition in Software/IT industry and I had not applied anywhere). So I ignored it for 4 more days till another recruiter texted me directly on Linkedin message and I woke up to process — “wait, something is happening!”. (tip! 👉) Hilarious start but nevertheless it does hint at the - importance of maintaining a strong and updated Linkedin profile.
But for most other routes, your Resume is the key to unlock doors!
Alrighty tell me, did the chicken come first or egg?
Search for roles before shaping your resume!
While you may feel you are a great fit and believe have written on same lines in your old resume. Write afresh or Rephrase rapidly — your past job role & responsibilities!
Mirror the terminology of future job role ladder. If you are applying for a Strategic Cloud Engineer role and one of your previous company’s internal terminology for a similar role was Application Developer or Architect; change it to match Google’s expectation. You can even use a slash approach - “Architect/ Cloud Engineer”.
Use phrases from future job description which match your contributions in past roles. If job descriptions says role involves — “providing subject matter knowledge to customer and partner teams…”; then write that instead of “guided customers & vendors…”.
If certain technologies & tools are explicitly requested in job description, state them explicitly in resume too, if experienced. Instead of used automation tools, state that — “used Terraform templates in Cloud Source Repo to provision Cloud infrastructure…”
If job description specifies certain technical or soft skills, reflect those as expected. If you found keywords like — “strategic problem solver, stakeholders management, writing technical articles, …” Use them as-is to explain your past contributions rather than synonyms.
Bottomline: Mirror the language of job description.
You can eliminate most noise by picking up a good template in first place!
Your family history with your parents name, home address, pet’s name and other excruciating irrelevant personal details adds to the blah, thus can be removed from the resume*! You can share that over a coffee later.*
Compress your past educational details. If you are an experienced professional applying for a job; no one at the Top Tech companies gives a hoot about how wonderful was your score at 10th grade. Mention the latest & relevant. If you have graduated, everyone knows you have completed the prior grades! 😑
Do you write technical blogs or white-papers?
Have you contributed to open source communities?
Have you volunteered at tech-for-good initiatives?
Do you have patents or publications?
Have you led DEI (Diversity Equity Inclusion) causes?
Now those are additional attractions you would like to include into your resume for amplifying impact! They do not count towards shortlisting; but amp up your presence post the preliminary pick.
Evaluate every role separately and review if your resume mirrors the language & domain expectations as closely as possible; and then hit apply!