How to Put Skills on Resume

How to Put Skills on Resume

Article by Donald Hick







A perfectly written resume plays a key role in job search. In today’s date many educational options are available. People have understood the importance of education and acquiring professional skills. So it helps you grab the best job opportunity. So it is important to get acquainted about how to put the skills on resume.The format of putting skills in resume varies as per profession. It can be broadly categorized as personal, essential and acquired skills. A hard worker, quick learner are some of the personal; where as leadership ,team building ,interpersonal rapport maintaining skills can be acquired undergoing training programs, reading the books based on these topics. The essential or job specific skills are developed or acquired through education and experience. By the word education, I mean to say the education in particular domain.

Tips to Put Skills on Resume•If you are a computer professional, then your domain specific skills such as proficiency in various languages such as C, C++, proficiency in networking, hardware, maintenance value a lot. Depending upon the scope of work, you can incorporate the skills such documentation and filing, training, multitasking, etc•If you are a teaching professional, the education you have acquired, the training programs you have conducted carry a lot of importance. The skill set, e.g. if you have acquired special training such as how to teach, or how to understand student psychology to motivate them in the studies etc. becomes the big asset of your resumeSaleable skillsIrrespective of which profession you want to pursue your career in, following are some of the skills that help your resume to stand stronger. •Team Orientation, leadership, team building •Communication•Languages known (German, French, Chinese, English etc.)•Management skills•Problem solvingResume skills is the important section of your resume. Put the skills effectively while writing the resume as; excellence, performance and the end result is the essence of the skills you possess.




About the Author

Donold is expert in Useful Resume Skills techniques. You can also see his Chronological Resume Tips here.

See Yourself Putting Better and Enjoying Golf More with Golf Psychology

See Yourself Putting Better and Enjoying Golf More with Golf Psychology

There were some amazing golf and putting psychology lessons on show with Phil Mickelson’s stunning win at the Tour Championship at East Lake this weekend. Yes I know Tiger won the FedEx Cup and the million with an amazingly consistent series of results. But given Phil’s year, both on and especially off the course, his victory on Sunday was a simply joyous and breathtaking turnaround. Phil had looked out of sorts in recent weeks and after his quadruple bogey 8 on the 14th hole in the first round, I had sadly anticipated him failing again over the weekend.

You’ve probably heard about Phil’s putting woes and his comments about how “I’ve hit the ball so well and yet my scores haven’t reflected that.” You’ve probably also heard about how “Bones” Mackay, Phil’s longstanding caddie, urged him to get help the week before the Tour Championship from Dave Stockton, one of the best putters in golf and twice a major winner. As if those weren’t sufficient reasons, Stockton also putts a bit like Phil does when he’s at his best.

So what major flaws did Dave Stockton notice in Phil’s putting stroke and what major changes did he prescribe? You’d expect them to be fairly severe given Phil’s recent comments about the inconsistent putting that has plagued him off and on over the last two years. He’s also talked about how his poor putting has detracted from the progress Butch Harman’s been making with his swing over the same period.

Well, Phil described the change in an interview as a “minor tweak” and went on to say “No, it’s very minor. It’s very minor. But [my] hands are back ahead like I used to putt, and the ball is just rolling much better.” In another interview, he talked about Dave Stockton’s comments just “reaffirming the way I’ve putted since I was a kid.”

So what golf psychology lessons can we learn from that then, Andrew, I hear you say? Well first of all, it confirms that if you’ve hit a particular shot well in the past, then you already unconsciously know how to hit it that well again – without changing your technique. All you need to do is to vividly recall one of those earlier successful shots and allow your unconscious golf mind to get on with the job as you get back into your comfort zone. I’d certainly include this type of visualisation in your pre-shot routine.

All that probably happened to Phil was he missed a few putts, lost his confidence and started to fear putting rather than enjoying the challenge. When that happens with any part of our golf game, we stop enjoying ourselves as much as we did and we start consciously analysing things. It doesn’t take too long before we start thinking there’s something drastically wrong with our swing or putting stroke and we start changing things, even though we seemed to have a perfectly effective method before.

This doesn’t just happen over a long period of time. For many of us it can happen in the middle of a round. Have you ever had the experience of playing a series of shots quite well and then hitting a bad shot, maybe a big slice? Did you badly pull or hook the next shot? If you did, you probably consciously thought you needed to make a swing correction, despite already knowing how to hit the ball quite well unconsciously. Well, you did say that you’d hit a series shots quite well, didn’t you.

Another golf psychology lesson was written on Phil Mickelson’s face all day on Sunday, not just when he won. He was clearly enjoying himself immensely, even before he started scoring well. After the round, he commented that, “Today was a lot of fun” and that’s not the way he’s been talking in recent weeks. Isn’t it odd how golfers seem to play so much better when they’re enjoying themselves, even if some, like a certain future Ryder Cup captain, have a hard time convincing us of that fact.

Andrew Fogg, the Golf Hypnotist, is an enthusiastic golfer, hypnotherapist and NLP Master Practitioner. He is a practicing golf psychologist and author of a soon to be published book The Secrets of Hypnotic Golf and a series of golf hypnosis MP3 programmes.

Visit his website for information on how to get the most success, pleasure and enjoyment from the wonderful game of golf. More specifically, it is about how to improve your golf by working on the 90 percent of the game that is played in the 6 inches between your ears.

Sign up for the free Golf Hypnotist ezine at http://www.golf-hypnotist.com/ and get your free 25- minute Your Own Virtual Caddy golf hypnosis MP3 that goes with this article.