5 Good Work Skills for Leaders to Include in their Resumes in 2024

  • 05/23/2024 11:20 PM
    Message # 13361206
    Anonymous member (Administrator)


    5 Good Work Skills For Leaders To Include In Their Resume In 2024

    From FORBES 

    By Rachel Wells

    Skills-based hiring is leading the way as one of the newest talent acquisition trends for 2024. For years, employers and job-seekers alike have been discussing ways in which the candidate experience can be improved, and the talent pool diversified, through focusing on skills rather than the bias traditionally associated with job and educational history.

    Now at last, that vision is finally becoming a reality, thanks to the widespread adoption of artificial intelligence within the workforce and particularly generative AI tools assisting the recruitment process. Speaking to the Society for Human Resource Management, Fredrick A. Scott, vice president, talent strategy and inclusion and early in career recruiting said:

    "In 2024, the technology is finally starting to catch up, and generative AI will unlock companies’ abilities for skills-based hiring, especially for early-in-career talent.”

    What does this mean to you as a prospective candidate?

    If you are on the hunt for a new role, either to expand your career to the next level, or simply for a fresh change due to needing a different work environment, you need to ensure now more than ever before, that you showcase your most important skills at key points throughout your resume. Employers are paying close attention to your skills, so finding creative ways to display them is where the majority of your effort should be concentrated.

    But what are the core skills employers need you to include in your resume? According to research and reports from the World Economic Forum, FlexJobs, and LinkedIn, here are a few:

    1. Communication

    Employers need hires who have solid all-round communication skills. This includes communication at the interpersonal level, as well as other aspects such as presentation skills, being professional in your manner and representing the values of the company when composing emails, or when engaged in other forms of correspondence.

    This skill is so critical that LinkedIn reported communication skills as being the number one skill for 2024. It was the common denominator in job adverts and the profiles of those who had been headhunted on LinkedIn over the past year, as per LinkedIn research.

    2. Teamwork

    Employers are looking for evidence of how well you'll fit in with their company culture. Depending on the role, some jobs may require you to have stronger teamwork skills than others, so it's very important that you make this clear throughout your resume. And at the end of the day, you will need to engage and collaborate with co-workers at some point, so how well you can succeed within a team setting is critical to your career success.

    3. Leadership

    Leadership skills is one of the core skill sets that you need to prove to employers, whether or not your plan on taking on a leadership-oriented role. This is because more and more employers are becoming aware that employees possessing leadership qualities are needed for organizations to successfully get ahead and remain star players in the competition.

    Having leadership skills means taking responsibility for your actions, owning your mistakes, taking initiative, and jumping in where needed to tackle problems.

    4. Problem-Solving

    Can you demonstrate evidence of where you've put your creativity to work and developed a solution? What were its tangible results within your role, team, project, or department? The ultimate reason why a new employer would hire you is because you are the solution to their problem. If you can show that you think outside of the box and are innovative and unafraid of exploring untapped areas, you're a star candidate.

    5. Self-Motivation

    How quickly do you quit? Do you have what it takes to face a challenge head-on and keep pushing forward? Employers are looking for candidates like you, who can demonstrate determination in the face of obstacles, and have the drive and will to succeed, because this leads to higher output and performance.

    How To Include Skills In Your Resume

    Now that you know what skills are needed, where do you place them, and how do you incorporate these skills?

    Here are a couple examples of areas within your resume that are most likely to benefit from adding these skills:

    First, always include a skills highlights section near the top of your resume, and use this to list your core competencies, relevant to the job role, in bullet points. Try to ensure that you include the above skills, as well as those that are mentioned in the person specification of the job advert.

    Another good way to include these skills in your resume is to show them in practice, and include them naturally in sections such as your professional profile or your work experience section. When approaching each section, ask yourself, how can I highlight that I possess XYZ skill in this particular role?

    For example, you might decide to include a bullet point in your work experience section, that speaks to how you demonstrated problem-solving ability, by saying: "Formulated strategies which increased overall performance, leading to the team exceeding target by 140% in my first month and over 200% in the second month."

    Using numbers as above helps to quantify your skills and strengthen the impression that you are confident with them and can provide value to your new employer.

    As employers adapt to the needs of the current job climate and begin preparing their systems, policies, and technology for skills-based hiring, what are you doing? How will you prepare yourself—and your resume—for the skills trend?

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/rachelwells/2024/03/18/5-good-work-skills-for-leaders-to-include-in-their-resume-in-2024/?sh=162252662fd4

  • 07/09/2024 5:48 PM
    Reply # 13380028 on 13361206
    Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The No. 1 skill companies are hiring for is also the hardest to find, according to new research

    From CNBC's MakeIt

    Checking off all the requirements in a job description isn’t enough to land a new role right now — your potential new boss wants to see that you’re disciplined, reliable and care about your work. 

    “A strong work ethic” is the top skill companies are looking for in new hires, but is one of the hardest to find, according to new research from ADP.  

    As part of its research, ADP surveyed more than 1,500 business owners, senior leaders and hiring managers about their hiring plans and priorities in 2024.

    ADP asked small, mid-size and large businesses what skills they’re prioritizing the most among new hires. Even as conversations about the importance of technical upskilling reach a fever pitch, soft skills emerged as the clear winner.

    “A strong work ethic” is a nebulous term. But people who embody it are typically punctual, organized, efficient with their time and, most importantly, willing to go the extra mile to get the job done well, per ADP’s research. 

    Other soft skills employers want include problem-solving, time management and communication. 

    The managers ADP surveyed said these in-demand skills are some of the hardest to source in candidates, noting that a strong work ethic and time management are particularly scarce.

    If a new hire possesses these skills, “their potential and opportunities are limitless,” Tina Wang, division vice president of HR at ADP, says, “You can teach specific technical skills needed for a job, but if a new hire comes in on day one with some of these behavioral skills, teaching those technical skills becomes much easier, effective and more fruitful.”

    Companies see upskilling as an antidote to the “great resignation”

    Upskilling and reskilling, or teaching employees new skills to transition into a different job or expand their current responsibilities, have become “huge priorities” for businesses in the past year, Wang notes. 

    Businesses started prioritizing skills training in the wake of the “great resignation” when millions of people quit their jobs, leaving employers scrambling for talent, she explains.

    Other hiring experts agree. “Coming out of the hiring surge companies experienced after 2020 and being fearful of losing workers in the ‘great resignation’ of 2021, hiring mistakes were made,” says Bert Bean, CEO of the staffing firm Insight Global. “Focusing on good old-fashioned hard work as a starting point is the best place to start resetting an employee base.” 

    Building a deeper, stronger talent bench becomes “so much more scalable and frictionless” when you have employees who are effective problem-solvers and have a strong work ethic, which is why these soft skills are so in-demand, Wang adds. 

    Some 85% of adults worldwide believe upskilling and reskilling will become the new standard for people throughout their careers, according to a new survey of more than 17,000 respondents across 17 countries conducted by The Harris Poll on behalf of Educational Testing Service (ETS), a private testing and talent solutions organization.

    As artificial intelligence integrates more into the workforce, soft skills, or people skills, are invaluable assets to professionals, the report notes. Other research shares the same sentiment: In February, LinkedIn declared communication as the most in-demand skill (hard and soft included) for 2024. 

    How to use your soft skills to stand out in a job interview

    Highlighting your soft skills can give you a competitive edge in an interview.

    “Communication and interpersonal skills can become readily apparent in the first 5-10 minutes of an interview,” says Wang. “Be yourself, have confidence in your life experiences, and those intangibles will become obvious for employers to connect the work they need to get done to what you bring to the table.”

    To demonstrate a strong work ethic, Bean recommends finding time in the conversation to talk about the hardest job you’ve ever had, perhaps when the interviewer asks you what your strengths are or how you’ve handled a challenge at work.

    “Paint the picture of what you had to do every day and describe how after [the situation or job] was over, you knew you had a strong ethic,” says Bean. “Everyone has a grit story to tell. Find yours, practice it and tell it with a passion.” 

    Bean underscores the importance of explaining your contributions in your last role and how they helped advance the company’s top or bottom line. Such examples can help illustrate your work ethic and help the hiring manager see that “they aren’t just hiring another individual contributor, but someone who understands the business and what drives value.” 

    Even if you don’t have a lot of direct work experience to cite, Wang says you can reference real-world experiences where you’ve demonstrated a strong work ethic or problem-solving, whether it was a challenging group project at school or a busy shift at an after-school job.

    “Ultimately, an interview is about ‘convincing,’” says Bean. “You will always have a good chance of convincing someone to make a decision — in this case, to hire you — if you can clearly articulate the value you bring to the business, are proud of your accomplishments, and show your alignment with the employer’s values.”

    https://www.cnbc.com/2024/05/03/no-1-skill-you-need-to-get-hired-right-now-according-to-new-research.html




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