More Support for Storied Resumes — But No Easy Answers

As if in response to yesterday’s entry in which Nick Corcodilos asked, “So, does your resume tell a story?” Certified Resume Strategist Karen Siwak writes about Career Storytelling: How Sharing Fascinating Experiences Gets YOU Hired!. “Ask any recruiter about a memorable candidate,” Siwak writes, “and chances are that it will be some element of [his or her] story that stands out.”

Siwak compares career storytelling to the third day of canoe tripping when “all pretenses are gone, and each of us has been revealed for who we are, in all our glorious colour and complexity” and everyone becomes comfortable relating storied experiences. I’ll take her word for it given that I’ve never been canoe tripping.

These stories, Siwak says, “are character building. They cause us to confront our foibles and take ownership of our strengths.”

They create the emotional space for self examination and questioning. Why am I here? Where am I going? Who do I want to be with? What do I want next?

Siwak doesn’t tell how to create a storied resume but asserts that she knows how to do it:

My goal as a Resume Strategist is to fast-track this process of self discovery, and I love it. I love getting people to open up about themselves and reach a place of personal authenticity from which truly unique and distinctive career stories can emerge. I love asking the probing questions that create “aha” moments. I love working with my clients to find exactly the right words to tell their stories. Any good marketing professional will tell you that stories sell. … Resume strategy isn’t just laying out a reverse chronology of your career path. It’s about telling a clear, succinct story about who you are and why you are the perfect solution to some company’s problem. It stirs interest and invites connection. It creates the opening for an interview, and lays the groundwork for you to be able to expand on your talents, strengths and insights.

I’ve encountered many resume writers who say they write resumes that tell a story, but I’ve never yet seen a resume that made me say, “YES! That’s a storied resume!” And that includes my own attempts. I still don’t know what the storied resume is, but I feel as though I will know it when I see it.

In the meantime, it’s great to hear another voice join the chorus for storytelling in resumes.