Nervous About a Career Gap? How to Position Being Unemployed on Your Resume

Nervous About a Career Gap? How to Position Being Unemployed on Your Resume

Previously appeared in Career Igniter

I often work with clients understandably worried about how to overcome a gap in their career history. Whether you left the job market by choice or otherwise – in my experience working with out-of-work clients is that by and large, they are usually anything but idle.

The trick to minimizing a career gap is to position your activities completed during the gap-time into language aligned with your career aspirations.

Volunteer Efforts

Fundraising, coaching, leading, organizing. These are how many of us spend our volunteer hours.

If you raised $3,000 for your child’s school, you can highlight how you created and executed a plan to make it happen, calculate if you raised more than the year prior and note it.

Did you make a highly manual or labor-intensive process easier by transitioning it online or adding a level of organization that never previously existed? In resume-speak, you’ve created automation and/or efficiencies. Quantify the time saved and you’ve got a tangible, measurable achievement!

Did you spend time coaching a team or leading a scout troop? Then you developed a curriculum that takes into account learning principals aligned with company or organizational standards.

Academic Efforts

Many of my clients have chosen to make a Career 180 and left their jobs to pursue and advanced academic degree. In these cases, I advise clients to list their new education status at the top of the resume below their career title and summary or branding paragraph.

Be sure to include curriculum details including course titles – as these often align with job posting keywords. If your curriculum included internships, special assignments, group projects, or case reviews, be sure to include to show that you have gained position- and industry-relevant insight.

Networking Efforts

When you have focused almost exclusively on searching for a job, it is helpful to show you have not been sitting idle.

Consider joining LinkedIn groups, sharing articles, initiating conversations or maybe even authoring your own posts using LinkedIn’s publishing platform. Doing so can help to cement your status as an industry thought leader – and you can include in your resume details around readership and reader engagement.

Expert Acts of Kindness

Think back on the times you have lent your expertise to a friend as an act of kindness.

Convert these acts of friendship into professional speak and they can read like a job experience. If you helped a small business organize their financial accounts, note you streamlined bookkeeping or reconciled accounts.

Using myself as an example, when my children were still in diapers, I took some time off from paid work. During that period, I often helped friends on projects that required my writing expertise. This included work on resumes, websites, press releases and even brochures. Although it was all unpaid, by showing this type of work on my resume showed employers that I had kept my skills fresh. More importantly, it helped to close my (paid) career cap!

Remember that all experience counts – paid or unpaid. Position it properly, and you will likely discover your large career gap doesn’t seem nearly as daunting.


In need of some career advice, guidance about how to write an executive resume or a rebranded LinkedIn?

As the founder and chief writer at Virginia Franco Resumes, offering customized executive resume and LinkedIn profile writing services for the 21st century job seeker, would be happy to chat! Book NOW for your free resume consult.

VAFrancoResumes@gmail.com | www.virginiafrancoresumes.com | Call/text 704-771-8572

Bridget Beranek

Accounts Payable Administration & Business Office Support at Fair Haven Board of Education

6y

To expand Adam Szyrlewski’s comment what is the best strategy when returning to the job market after facing a serious illness? 14 years out to be exact. While I am employed I am also very much underemployed. Finding the first job was hard. Trying to find a better position is proving to be even harder.

John Hoover

Hiring Enhancement - Much Better Jobs System Unlocks Hidden Jobs Fast! Is Your Dream Job waiting to interview you?

7y

STOP being unemployed usingour proven methods at:

  • No alternative text description for this image
Like
Reply
Yani A.

Full-stack Developer with a background in Digital Marketing Strategizing

7y
taryn D.

Marketing & Branding Specialist at Innovator, Iventor taking new products to market currently in Landscaping & Irrigation industries

7y

And while Resumes are important and should be treated as a "ROAD MAP", however let "PEOPLE EXPLAIN THE GAP" as a "PIECE OF PAPER IS NOT WHO YOU ARE HIRING" it's "THE PERSON THAT MAY INCREASE THE BOTTOM LINE REVENUE OF YOUR COMPANY THAT YOU ARE!" AND IF YOU KNOW PEOPLE THEN YOU CERTAINLY WILL NOT REGRET IT!

To view or add a comment, sign in

More articles by Virginia Franco

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics