Friday, May 29, 2020
The Ladders Scam
The Ladders Scam Update: I closed the comments on this post on 8/17/09. The point has been made. Well isnt that a nice title. Im really drawing a line in the sand on this one, especially since The Ladders was on the list of companies that might one day acquire JibberJobber. I guess Ill have to scratch that one off the list. But this is such an important topic, and one Im asked about on a regular basis, that I want to let my users, and other professional and executive job seekers (who should be using JibberJobber to organize their job search :p), know about. First, the caveat: I have never sent my resume to The Ladders asking them for a review. So all of what Im sharing here is not from my first-hand experience. Heres the situation: You send a resume to The Ladders for their free critique. Then you get back a letter telling you what all the problems with your resume is, and for a fee they will get you a new one. Last I remember the fee is around $700. Remember, we are usually talking about resumes for executives. The biggest red flag Ive read is that the critiques are form letters. They will even critique their own, The Ladders generated, resumes! Its a simple process that a salesperson goes through to make a sale, not a real resume critique that a professional resume writer would give. In other words, it seems they hardly even look at the resume they just get you back a scary letter saying how bad your resume sucks, and that they can make it shine like new. Scare tactics. Im sure its done well for them. Here is some more reading on this Google The Ladders Scam or The Ladders Rip-off. All of the links below come from those search results. And do your own due diligence like I said, I have not had first hand experience with this, but Ive heard about it plenty. Susan Ireland is a professional resume writer who wrote a nice post about how she set up her The Ladders account, to help you know what to expect. The comments quickly turned nasty, though thats where the meat of the feedback is and a lot of talk about getting resume reviews from The Ladders. The third comment from Susans post points to a bad link for Manager Tools, but I searched and found a good one, with the text of the canned response (below). Mr. Ask the Headhunter himself, Nick Corcodilos, has two enlightening posts on the Ladders one called TheLadders: Going down? (15 comments) and the other is the dope on TheLadders (95 comments). Nick DOES NOT like The Ladders the comments are enlightening. A person on epinions writes: I had the resume professionally constructed and I was very pleased with it. The Ladders has a resume review service for free, so I sent it along thinking they would recommend tweaks here and there. I received back a letter stating things wrong with my resume that I did not have in there. They even referenced companies I have had no association. I wrote back and said No thanks, but thanks for the form letter and was then bombarded with you have to have your resume rewritten form letters. So heres the form letter I got from Manager Tools this really is the scariest thing, since when you are vulnerable, looking for a job, in despair, and ready to drop money to fix any problem, this speaks to you. Its Scare Tactics 101. The letter (with my own font formatting), in response to a resume that was professionally written: Dear [name], Thank you for your resume submission! My name is xxxxx and I will be providing your resume critique. In this email I will outline my thoughts, provide a price quote to you, explain the process, and give you instructions at the end of my review to get started. If you decide to proceed, you will be working directly with one of our top writers versed in your industry and level. Our methodology is simple: We apply extensive resume writing experience and knowledge of the $100k+ job market to determine how well your resume represents your value and distinguishes you from the competition. Please note that I am NOT critiquing your background, experience, or potential for success. I am commenting on how you are MARKETING those assets to potential employers and how you are competing against others with similar goals. Your resume needs to be assertive in showing prospective employers how you would be of value to them, because no matter how good you are at your job, the resume is what really lands the interview. Before I begin the critique, I do need to warn you about my style, because my comments can seem bluntbut the reality is the job market is very competitive now, so I find it beneficial to tell it as it is rather than yes people to death. (I hate when its done to me!) Here are the major issues I see on your resume: SUMMARY/INTRODUCTION Your summary is missing the âWOWâ factor. Youre relying on too many business clichés things like, Excellent written and verbal communication skills. These crutch phrases dont really tell the reader anything about you and what youve done! You need a much more results-focused introduction, to grab the readers attention and make them want to keep reading! The five main aspects within a distinguished summary indicates: your highest career achievements, experience level, your value, your industry and your immediate career goal, and convey, Look how what I have to offer will be an asset to you. I also recommend including a Core Competencies subsection just below the summary specific areas of expertise and knowledge that can be supported by solid accomplishments. Including a list of Core Competencies is a great executive strategy, and provides both a quick and comprehensive look at your strengths from the beginning. Additionally, a core competencies or keyword section also increases the odds of an electronic screening agent making a match between your resume and an open job requisition. CONTENT Todays job descriptions briefly sum up your position in paragraph format, then uses bullets for your most marketable attributes results of the duties listed in the paragraph. This strategy separates the duties from the results and really highlights your key accomplishments, making them easy to find when the resume is quickly scanned. As you only have SECONDS to grab their attention. You have everything bulleted resulting in NOTHING standing out to the eye of the reader. On another noteâ¦the references tag line just isnât done anymore ESPECIALLY for upper level executive resumes! Its like saying the end at the end of a movie. MECHANICS The language could be MUCH stronger. You vacillate between active voice and passive voice in the document (âResponsible forâ, etc.). In the active voice, the subject acts. In the passive voice, the subject is acted upon. The active voice is more natural, direct, vigorous and emphatic traits you want your resume to have in tone. DESIGN The vast majority of resumes are handled now by resume databases whether online or Human Resource Information Systems within companies. The databases have preferences for certain design elements. One of them is a preference for sans serif font styles. Change the font to something that is sans serif and avoid the default Times New Roman or other serif fonts. OVERALL IMPRESSION/STRATEGY Jamie, your resume is your self marketing tool. It gets you in the door. It must be strong on ALL levels in order to achieve the best results. All-in-all, I dont think youre putting your best foot forward if you plan to use this resume in its current condition. Youâre underselling yourself. You are in need of a self-marketing brochure one that shows your high caliber. This document isnt doing that for you. Please understand, all of this is not to say that you are not a good candidate, merely that the way your resume presents your career is not yet very effective or exciting to the reader (who typically has read 100+ resumes just before getting to yours). You need to remember the purpose of a resume to take an AGGRESSIVE approach in selling you to a potential employer. Why does that employer want to interview YOU? You need to be MUCH more active in pulling out your forte things that will show potential employers what they get for their investment (your compensation). What can you bring to the table that your competition cannot? What sets you apart? Right now you are not giving the reader the best information to excite him/her enough to contact you for an interview. Remember, unless you can convince them of your VALUE, they will not contact you. Most people are like you they struggle to put themselves down on paper effectively but thats where we come in, because we are experts at knowing the best way to present you. In fact, even Marc Cenedella, CEO of TheLadders came to OUR writing team when he needed a resume! Im not sure that the resume they turn around will be awesome, and it should be done by a professional resume writer, I just want to bring out the idea that they are using a sales form letter no matter who writes your resume Ive heard of them sending this form letter to people who have had their own resume writers write the letter! Need your resume reviewed? Get the review from a professional resume writer, not a salesperson who uses a form letter. JibberJobber has partners who are resume writers you can learn more about them here (we stay out of it its between you and them). Or you can go to Career Directors, National Resume Writers Association, or the Career Management Alliance. The Ladders Scam Update: I closed the comments on this post on 8/17/09. The point has been made. Well isnt that a nice title. Im really drawing a line in the sand on this one, especially since The Ladders was on the list of companies that might one day acquire JibberJobber. I guess Ill have to scratch that one off the list. But this is such an important topic, and one Im asked about on a regular basis, that I want to let my users, and other professional and executive job seekers (who should be using JibberJobber to organize their job search :p), know about. First, the caveat: I have never sent my resume to The Ladders asking them for a review. So all of what Im sharing here is not from my first-hand experience. Heres the situation: You send a resume to The Ladders for their free critique. Then you get back a letter telling you what all the problems with your resume is, and for a fee they will get you a new one. Last I remember the fee is around $700. Remember, we are usually talking about resumes for executives. The biggest red flag Ive read is that the critiques are form letters. They will even critique their own, The Ladders generated, resumes! Its a simple process that a salesperson goes through to make a sale, not a real resume critique that a professional resume writer would give. In other words, it seems they hardly even look at the resume they just get you back a scary letter saying how bad your resume sucks, and that they can make it shine like new. Scare tactics. Im sure its done well for them. Here is some more reading on this Google The Ladders Scam or The Ladders Rip-off. All of the links below come from those search results. And do your own due diligence like I said, I have not had first hand experience with this, but Ive heard about it plenty. Susan Ireland is a professional resume writer who wrote a nice post about how she set up her The Ladders account, to help you know what to expect. The comments quickly turned nasty, though thats where the meat of the feedback is and a lot of talk about getting resume reviews from The Ladders. The third comment from Susans post points to a bad link for Manager Tools, but I searched and found a good one, with the text of the canned response (below). Mr. Ask the Headhunter himself, Nick Corcodilos, has two enlightening posts on the Ladders one called TheLadders: Going down? (15 comments) and the other is the dope on TheLadders (95 comments). Nick DOES NOT like The Ladders the comments are enlightening. A person on epinions writes: I had the resume professionally constructed and I was very pleased with it. The Ladders has a resume review service for free, so I sent it along thinking they would recommend tweaks here and there. I received back a letter stating things wrong with my resume that I did not have in there. They even referenced companies I have had no association. I wrote back and said No thanks, but thanks for the form letter and was then bombarded with you have to have your resume rewritten form letters. So heres the form letter I got from Manager Tools this really is the scariest thing, since when you are vulnerable, looking for a job, in despair, and ready to drop money to fix any problem, this speaks to you. Its Scare Tactics 101. The letter (with my own font formatting), in response to a resume that was professionally written: Dear [name], Thank you for your resume submission! My name is xxxxx and I will be providing your resume critique. In this email I will outline my thoughts, provide a price quote to you, explain the process, and give you instructions at the end of my review to get started. If you decide to proceed, you will be working directly with one of our top writers versed in your industry and level. Our methodology is simple: We apply extensive resume writing experience and knowledge of the $100k+ job market to determine how well your resume represents your value and distinguishes you from the competition. Please note that I am NOT critiquing your background, experience, or potential for success. I am commenting on how you are MARKETING those assets to potential employers and how you are competing against others with similar goals. Your resume needs to be assertive in showing prospective employers how you would be of value to them, because no matter how good you are at your job, the resume is what really lands the interview. Before I begin the critique, I do need to warn you about my style, because my comments can seem bluntbut the reality is the job market is very competitive now, so I find it beneficial to tell it as it is rather than yes people to death. (I hate when its done to me!) Here are the major issues I see on your resume: SUMMARY/INTRODUCTION Your summary is missing the âWOWâ factor. Youre relying on too many business clichés things like, Excellent written and verbal communication skills. These crutch phrases dont really tell the reader anything about you and what youve done! You need a much more results-focused introduction, to grab the readers attention and make them want to keep reading! The five main aspects within a distinguished summary indicates: your highest career achievements, experience level, your value, your industry and your immediate career goal, and convey, Look how what I have to offer will be an asset to you. I also recommend including a Core Competencies subsection just below the summary specific areas of expertise and knowledge that can be supported by solid accomplishments. Including a list of Core Competencies is a great executive strategy, and provides both a quick and comprehensive look at your strengths from the beginning. Additionally, a core competencies or keyword section also increases the odds of an electronic screening agent making a match between your resume and an open job requisition. CONTENT Todays job descriptions briefly sum up your position in paragraph format, then uses bullets for your most marketable attributes results of the duties listed in the paragraph. This strategy separates the duties from the results and really highlights your key accomplishments, making them easy to find when the resume is quickly scanned. As you only have SECONDS to grab their attention. You have everything bulleted resulting in NOTHING standing out to the eye of the reader. On another noteâ¦the references tag line just isnât done anymore ESPECIALLY for upper level executive resumes! Its like saying the end at the end of a movie. MECHANICS The language could be MUCH stronger. You vacillate between active voice and passive voice in the document (âResponsible forâ, etc.). In the active voice, the subject acts. In the passive voice, the subject is acted upon. The active voice is more natural, direct, vigorous and emphatic traits you want your resume to have in tone. DESIGN The vast majority of resumes are handled now by resume databases whether online or Human Resource Information Systems within companies. The databases have preferences for certain design elements. One of them is a preference for sans serif font styles. Change the font to something that is sans serif and avoid the default Times New Roman or other serif fonts. OVERALL IMPRESSION/STRATEGY Jamie, your resume is your self marketing tool. It gets you in the door. It must be strong on ALL levels in order to achieve the best results. All-in-all, I dont think youre putting your best foot forward if you plan to use this resume in its current condition. Youâre underselling yourself. You are in need of a self-marketing brochure one that shows your high caliber. This document isnt doing that for you. Please understand, all of this is not to say that you are not a good candidate, merely that the way your resume presents your career is not yet very effective or exciting to the reader (who typically has read 100+ resumes just before getting to yours). You need to remember the purpose of a resume to take an AGGRESSIVE approach in selling you to a potential employer. Why does that employer want to interview YOU? You need to be MUCH more active in pulling out your forte things that will show potential employers what they get for their investment (your compensation). What can you bring to the table that your competition cannot? What sets you apart? Right now you are not giving the reader the best information to excite him/her enough to contact you for an interview. Remember, unless you can convince them of your VALUE, they will not contact you. Most people are like you they struggle to put themselves down on paper effectively but thats where we come in, because we are experts at knowing the best way to present you. In fact, even Marc Cenedella, CEO of TheLadders came to OUR writing team when he needed a resume! Im not sure that the resume they turn around will be awesome, and it should be done by a professional resume writer, I just want to bring out the idea that they are using a sales form letter no matter who writes your resume Ive heard of them sending this form letter to people who have had their own resume writers write the letter! Need your resume reviewed? Get the review from a professional resume writer, not a salesperson who uses a form letter. JibberJobber has partners who are resume writers you can learn more about them here (we stay out of it its between you and them). Or you can go to Career Directors, National Resume Writers Association, or the Career Management Alliance. The Ladders Scam Update: I closed the comments on this post on 8/17/09. The point has been made. Well isnt that a nice title. Im really drawing a line in the sand on this one, especially since The Ladders was on the list of companies that might one day acquire JibberJobber. I guess Ill have to scratch that one off the list. But this is such an important topic, and one Im asked about on a regular basis, that I want to let my users, and other professional and executive job seekers (who should be using JibberJobber to organize their job search :p), know about. First, the caveat: I have never sent my resume to The Ladders asking them for a review. So all of what Im sharing here is not from my first-hand experience. Heres the situation: You send a resume to The Ladders for their free critique. Then you get back a letter telling you what all the problems with your resume is, and for a fee they will get you a new one. Last I remember the fee is around $700. Remember, we are usually talking about resumes for executives. The biggest red flag Ive read is that the critiques are form letters. They will even critique their own, The Ladders generated, resumes! Its a simple process that a salesperson goes through to make a sale, not a real resume critique that a professional resume writer would give. In other words, it seems they hardly even look at the resume they just get you back a scary letter saying how bad your resume sucks, and that they can make it shine like new. Scare tactics. Im sure its done well for them. Here is some more reading on this Google The Ladders Scam or The Ladders Rip-off. All of the links below come from those search results. And do your own due diligence like I said, I have not had first hand experience with this, but Ive heard about it plenty. Susan Ireland is a professional resume writer who wrote a nice post about how she set up her The Ladders account, to help you know what to expect. The comments quickly turned nasty, though thats where the meat of the feedback is and a lot of talk about getting resume reviews from The Ladders. The third comment from Susans post points to a bad link for Manager Tools, but I searched and found a good one, with the text of the canned response (below). Mr. Ask the Headhunter himself, Nick Corcodilos, has two enlightening posts on the Ladders one called TheLadders: Going down? (15 comments) and the other is the dope on TheLadders (95 comments). Nick DOES NOT like The Ladders the comments are enlightening. A person on epinions writes: I had the resume professionally constructed and I was very pleased with it. The Ladders has a resume review service for free, so I sent it along thinking they would recommend tweaks here and there. I received back a letter stating things wrong with my resume that I did not have in there. They even referenced companies I have had no association. I wrote back and said No thanks, but thanks for the form letter and was then bombarded with you have to have your resume rewritten form letters. So heres the form letter I got from Manager Tools this really is the scariest thing, since when you are vulnerable, looking for a job, in despair, and ready to drop money to fix any problem, this speaks to you. Its Scare Tactics 101. The letter (with my own font formatting), in response to a resume that was professionally written: Dear [name], Thank you for your resume submission! My name is xxxxx and I will be providing your resume critique. In this email I will outline my thoughts, provide a price quote to you, explain the process, and give you instructions at the end of my review to get started. If you decide to proceed, you will be working directly with one of our top writers versed in your industry and level. Our methodology is simple: We apply extensive resume writing experience and knowledge of the $100k+ job market to determine how well your resume represents your value and distinguishes you from the competition. Please note that I am NOT critiquing your background, experience, or potential for success. I am commenting on how you are MARKETING those assets to potential employers and how you are competing against others with similar goals. Your resume needs to be assertive in showing prospective employers how you would be of value to them, because no matter how good you are at your job, the resume is what really lands the interview. Before I begin the critique, I do need to warn you about my style, because my comments can seem bluntbut the reality is the job market is very competitive now, so I find it beneficial to tell it as it is rather than yes people to death. (I hate when its done to me!) Here are the major issues I see on your resume: SUMMARY/INTRODUCTION Your summary is missing the âWOWâ factor. Youre relying on too many business clichés things like, Excellent written and verbal communication skills. These crutch phrases dont really tell the reader anything about you and what youve done! You need a much more results-focused introduction, to grab the readers attention and make them want to keep reading! The five main aspects within a distinguished summary indicates: your highest career achievements, experience level, your value, your industry and your immediate career goal, and convey, Look how what I have to offer will be an asset to you. I also recommend including a Core Competencies subsection just below the summary specific areas of expertise and knowledge that can be supported by solid accomplishments. Including a list of Core Competencies is a great executive strategy, and provides both a quick and comprehensive look at your strengths from the beginning. Additionally, a core competencies or keyword section also increases the odds of an electronic screening agent making a match between your resume and an open job requisition. CONTENT Todays job descriptions briefly sum up your position in paragraph format, then uses bullets for your most marketable attributes results of the duties listed in the paragraph. This strategy separates the duties from the results and really highlights your key accomplishments, making them easy to find when the resume is quickly scanned. As you only have SECONDS to grab their attention. You have everything bulleted resulting in NOTHING standing out to the eye of the reader. On another noteâ¦the references tag line just isnât done anymore ESPECIALLY for upper level executive resumes! Its like saying the end at the end of a movie. MECHANICS The language could be MUCH stronger. You vacillate between active voice and passive voice in the document (âResponsible forâ, etc.). In the active voice, the subject acts. In the passive voice, the subject is acted upon. The active voice is more natural, direct, vigorous and emphatic traits you want your resume to have in tone. DESIGN The vast majority of resumes are handled now by resume databases whether online or Human Resource Information Systems within companies. The databases have preferences for certain design elements. One of them is a preference for sans serif font styles. Change the font to something that is sans serif and avoid the default Times New Roman or other serif fonts. OVERALL IMPRESSION/STRATEGY Jamie, your resume is your self marketing tool. It gets you in the door. It must be strong on ALL levels in order to achieve the best results. All-in-all, I dont think youre putting your best foot forward if you plan to use this resume in its current condition. Youâre underselling yourself. You are in need of a self-marketing brochure one that shows your high caliber. This document isnt doing that for you. Please understand, all of this is not to say that you are not a good candidate, merely that the way your resume presents your career is not yet very effective or exciting to the reader (who typically has read 100+ resumes just before getting to yours). You need to remember the purpose of a resume to take an AGGRESSIVE approach in selling you to a potential employer. Why does that employer want to interview YOU? You need to be MUCH more active in pulling out your forte things that will show potential employers what they get for their investment (your compensation). What can you bring to the table that your competition cannot? What sets you apart? Right now you are not giving the reader the best information to excite him/her enough to contact you for an interview. Remember, unless you can convince them of your VALUE, they will not contact you. Most people are like you they struggle to put themselves down on paper effectively but thats where we come in, because we are experts at knowing the best way to present you. In fact, even Marc Cenedella, CEO of TheLadders came to OUR writing team when he needed a resume! Im not sure that the resume they turn around will be awesome, and it should be done by a professional resume writer, I just want to bring out the idea that they are using a sales form letter no matter who writes your resume Ive heard of them sending this form letter to people who have had their own resume writers write the letter! Need your resume reviewed? Get the review from a professional resume writer, not a salesperson who uses a form letter. JibberJobber has partners who are resume writers you can learn more about them here (we stay out of it its between you and them). Or you can go to Career Directors, National Resume Writers Association, or the Career Management Alliance.
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