GETTING YOUR APPLICATION TO THE TOP OF THE PILE:
It's application time for summer theatre jobs. You're
submitting blindly against dozens of other applicants, so
how can you get your resume to stay as the pile gets smaller
and smaller? As a freelancer, I'm often right there with
you, sending out enough cover letters to make my head spin.
This time around, though, I'm on the receiving end, and I've
got some tips that might bring you closer to the top of a
yes pile….certainly mine.
First, you have to get your foot in the door, and if you're
sending in your "stuff," then that's via your cover letter.
This is how I get to know you, much more than whatever is on
your resume. Start it off by helping me out - what job are
you applying for, and how you heard about it.
What else goes into the cover letter is a completely
personal decision, but that's it - personal. I want to find
out what kind of person you are, what your experience is,
and how your past experience has prepared you for this job.
Certainly mention if you have done nearly the same thing as
the current job for which you're applying. What if you're a
student or young professional with a wide background, and
just starting to focus on one area? If you have scenic
painting experience, no matter how great it is, if you can't
find a way to make it relate to the current job (which isn't
scenic painting), I don't particularly care. But if you can
say how you used that experience to be a good team member
and get the job done under a short timeframe, and the
theatre has a similar short timeframe, now that can help me
draw a parallel, even if it's not in exactly the same field.
Find ways to connect your past experience, so that I will
want to hire you for the job posted.
Here's another hint - do some research. Check out the
company's website and/or the person accepting the
applications. Find out something about them that isn't in
the job posting, and then mention it - examples include
congratulating them on the company's anniversary season
(if it is one), or your mutual experience working in a
proscenium house (if it is one). Taking the time to go one
step further shows me you have initiative and care. Showing
that you and I (or the theatre) have a common connection,
whether a co-worker or an aspect of the theatre, will also
go a long way. Correct spelling and punctuation is
important, too.
If your cover letter has intrigued me enough, I'll check out
your resume. The first judgement I'll make happens before I
even open it. In my opinion, there are two crucial items
that let me know if you've set it up for your own
convenience or mine - the filename and document type. A file
named "Resume new" means nothing to me. Put your last name
in there somewhere (preferably first), so if I download it,
I can find yours again quickly. I'm a fan of a filename
something like LastName_JobPosition.pdf, but that's a
personal preference.
Ah, PDF. There's the next thing I check. You should
certainly be editing your resume in a Word document or
similar file type, but once it's ready to send out, save it
as a PDF. Word documents change between Mac and PC, let
alone computer to computer. It may look perfectly aligned
on your screen, but transfers completely different on mine,
especially if I'm opening it quickly on my phone. Fonts
change, too. These days, "save as PDF" is an option on most
word processing applications. If it isn't, there are several
free programs (CutePDF comes to mind) to download that
essentially add a printer driver to your computer, which
"prints" as a PDF.
As for your resume itself, there are many ways to arrange
your information. The important thing is to make it clear
and legible. Check that all your columns and tabs are lined
up equally. If you use initials (say, for the name of your
university), there's a chance I need an explanation fairly
nearby. Spellcheck, and then have someone else proof you.
Also, here's a novel idea to many young theatre students -
you can actually tailor your resume to different jobs. Yes,
you only have so many credits you can pull from at a young
age. I'm likely going to look at the top third the most, so
put the ones most directly related to the job at hand there.
I have one very long "Full Resume" document on my computer,
that I then edit and rearrange depending on the job for which
I'm applying. Granted, I have one credit that I'm rather
proud to have on my resume - not to mention that it was my
best paying - so it's almost always at the very top of my
resume. After that, I edit the rest every time…and save it
as a new PDF.
There will be so many extenuating circumstances that affect
your hiring that you can't control, but following these tips
might just help you get that much closer to an interview, or
me contacting someone that is a mutual friend of yours to
find out more about you. Hint, that person may not be who
you've listed as an official reference, if I have a
connection to someone else at a theatre you've listed.
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