Resume Recovery Tips
What if you lost all your computer files -- including your painstakingly prepared resume? Survivors of Hurricane Katrina are all too familiar with this scenario, and they can tell you that it's a daunting task to look for employment when you're not only homeless and jobless but resume-less as well.
Natural disasters, theft, computer crashes, viruses, or other computer or file damage can all cause the loss of important data. Here's help for those displaced by Katrina as well as anyone else confronted with the prospect of having to rebuild their resumes from scratch.
Before You Rebuild Your Resume
Check Your Monster Account: If you previously uploaded your resume to Monster, your task is easy. Log in to your Seek, Mycareer or Career One online candidate account to retrieve it. If you posted your resume on the Resume Tips message board, search the board with your user name to find it.
Check Your Email Account: If you've emailed your resume through a Web-based email program (such as Netscape or Hotmail), you could be in luck. Log in to your email account, and look your resume in your sent folder.
Ask Your Employer: See if your most recent employer has a copy of the resume or application you submitted when you were hired.
Contact Other Recipients of Your Resume: Many employers and recruiters store all resumes received, even from candidates who weren't interviewed or hired. Explain your predicament to the HR department, and ask them to forward a copy of your resume. If you sent your resume to a friend or colleague for feedback or advice, see if that person saved a copy.
Ask Your Resume Writer: If you've had your resume professionally prepared, your resume writer probably still has a copy on file. Even if it's been several years since you had your resume prepared, at least you won't have to start from scratch.
Hire an IT Guru: As long as you have access to the computer or disk your resume was stored on, an IT expert specializing in data recovery may be able to salvage files thought to be forever lost.
If it is really gone
If your work history is lengthy, one of the hardest parts of re-creating the resume is remembering specifics of long-ago jobs. Here are some tips for uncovering career information:
Request tax records from your accountant or tax preparer to help you remember employers and dates.
Track down former colleagues and supervisors to see if they remember details of your employment and achievements.
Ask previous employers if they have your performance reviews on file. These will help you reconstruct your top accomplishments.
Go sit someplace quiet with a notepad and pen, and jot down your career progression from the time you finished your education. You may find that really concentrating and getting the facts down on paper will help you remember employment information.
Order transcripts from schools and training programs to get the details for your resume's Education section. These documents will give you the names of courses you completed, your GPA and date of completion.
Three Easy Ways to Protect Your Resume
Create a Monster account if you haven't already, and upload your resume. You'll now be able to access your resume from any computer with Internet access. And keep your resume updated so that you can always access that lates version of it.
Email yourself an electronic copy of your resume at a Web-based email account. Save the file in your inbox and/or sent folder, where you can retrieve it from any computer.
Keep both a printed and electronic copy on CD or floppy disk (along with other important papers) in a fireproof box and/or safe-deposit box