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Having trouble creating your resume? Microsoft relies on LinkedIn for its assistant to help you in the process

Anonim

Looking for work in Spain is quite an odyssey. Well, in the case of trying to find a first job, to seek to improve the employment situation or to try to get out of unemployment, a scourge and a phase that many of us are going through, it is essential to have a good resume

To do this and if you have any doubts, we can always go to all kinds of guidance services in our city or autonomous community or any other body. And surely you will have noticed that in each of them they give you different advice when preparing a resume.Well, if you are not satisfied with the ideas that they offer you and you want to create your own curriculum now from Microsoft they offer you one more tool to help you in such performance

Microsoft was taking a long time to take advantage of the purchase of LinkedIn, the social network designed for the professional field in which they invested a good amount of money. And now thanks to LinkedIn users will be able to improve their resume.

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For this they have a tool in Microsoft Word such as Curriculum Assistant, which is now supported by LinkedIn, so that together with the examples it offers to indicate how the appearance, structure and contents of our job presentation, now add an assistant that guides us based on our search"

This assistant allows us to adapt the curriculum to each situation and the same CV (curriculum vitae) is not valid for all positions of work to which we choose. There are always tweaks and modifications here and there.

This wizard is based on LinkedIn's analysis of the millions of user profiles that use its platform. Yes, your profile is being analyzed (anonymously we hope) to help other users who will also be studied. A tool that studies other cases of users looking for jobs similar to the one we are applying for based on the analysis it performs of what we are typing.

The downside is that for now only Office 365 users will be able to try this tool and as long as they use English in the system operational. For now, the wizard is available in a limited number of countries such as the United States, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, India, Japan, New Zealand, Singapore, and South Africa.

Via | The Verge

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