Is a picture of my e-ID on my resume a good idea? [duplicate]
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This question already has an answer here:
Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?
6 answers
I recently redesigned my resume to make it easier to read and edit, by removing nested tables, moving certain areas, and combining others. Part of what I did was replace some of my personal information with a scan of my e-ID. They look like this:
This replaced my gender, my name, my date and place of birth and my nationality, and also meant I had a picture of myself on my resume. I also partially put it on there because it is sort of an eye-catcher, while still being somewhat neutral. Since Belgian e-ID cards require you to have a card reader and a pin code to do anything remotely useful with them, I don't think it's a huge security risk.
However, I'm wondering if putting it on there might bring other risks along. Other questions on here mention that putting a picture of yourself in your resume could lead to you being discarded right away to avoid any potential discrimination lawsuits, but also that some regions actually expect a photo, and that men are more likely to get a callback if they put one in. That's also specific to putting a picture of yourself, and the effect could be different (for better or for worse) if the image actually contains crucial information for my resume.
resume
marked as duplicate by David K, yochannah, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Community⦠Jul 10 '15 at 11:49
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
 |Â
show 4 more comments
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?
6 answers
I recently redesigned my resume to make it easier to read and edit, by removing nested tables, moving certain areas, and combining others. Part of what I did was replace some of my personal information with a scan of my e-ID. They look like this:
This replaced my gender, my name, my date and place of birth and my nationality, and also meant I had a picture of myself on my resume. I also partially put it on there because it is sort of an eye-catcher, while still being somewhat neutral. Since Belgian e-ID cards require you to have a card reader and a pin code to do anything remotely useful with them, I don't think it's a huge security risk.
However, I'm wondering if putting it on there might bring other risks along. Other questions on here mention that putting a picture of yourself in your resume could lead to you being discarded right away to avoid any potential discrimination lawsuits, but also that some regions actually expect a photo, and that men are more likely to get a callback if they put one in. That's also specific to putting a picture of yourself, and the effect could be different (for better or for worse) if the image actually contains crucial information for my resume.
resume
marked as duplicate by David K, yochannah, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Community⦠Jul 10 '15 at 11:49
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
4
What benefit do you expect to gain from this tactic?
â Kevin
Jul 8 '15 at 20:23
2
@DavidK I already mentioned that other question and the remarks they had in there in my own question, and how this is different. I don't think it's a duplicate.
â Nzall
Jul 8 '15 at 20:27
2
You also give your age, and a copy of your signature.
â mhoran_psprep
Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
2
@Nzall - you may see your personal information as "bland text", but the hiring manager see it as non-distracting and easy to read. Why draw so much attention to your name and other personal info when what you really want the employer to see is your experience? Further, For an electronically submitted resume, I might want to copy-and-paste your personal information into an email to a colleague "Hey Judy, can you contact XXXX at YYYY to set up an interview", but if all you've provided is an image, I can't do that so you've increased the chance of me making a typo that makes yourself unreachable.
â Johnny
Jul 9 '15 at 1:04
2
Are you in Belgium? My understanding is that in Europe it is common for CVs to contain a lot more information than is typically present in the United States, so for US readers keep this in mind (it'd be crazy to include this information on a resume in the United States). I was shocked when reviewing some CVs for colleagues in Germany to see how much information they put on them.
â Elysian Fieldsâ¦
Jul 9 '15 at 2:19
 |Â
show 4 more comments
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
up vote
3
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?
6 answers
I recently redesigned my resume to make it easier to read and edit, by removing nested tables, moving certain areas, and combining others. Part of what I did was replace some of my personal information with a scan of my e-ID. They look like this:
This replaced my gender, my name, my date and place of birth and my nationality, and also meant I had a picture of myself on my resume. I also partially put it on there because it is sort of an eye-catcher, while still being somewhat neutral. Since Belgian e-ID cards require you to have a card reader and a pin code to do anything remotely useful with them, I don't think it's a huge security risk.
However, I'm wondering if putting it on there might bring other risks along. Other questions on here mention that putting a picture of yourself in your resume could lead to you being discarded right away to avoid any potential discrimination lawsuits, but also that some regions actually expect a photo, and that men are more likely to get a callback if they put one in. That's also specific to putting a picture of yourself, and the effect could be different (for better or for worse) if the image actually contains crucial information for my resume.
resume
This question already has an answer here:
Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?
6 answers
I recently redesigned my resume to make it easier to read and edit, by removing nested tables, moving certain areas, and combining others. Part of what I did was replace some of my personal information with a scan of my e-ID. They look like this:
This replaced my gender, my name, my date and place of birth and my nationality, and also meant I had a picture of myself on my resume. I also partially put it on there because it is sort of an eye-catcher, while still being somewhat neutral. Since Belgian e-ID cards require you to have a card reader and a pin code to do anything remotely useful with them, I don't think it's a huge security risk.
However, I'm wondering if putting it on there might bring other risks along. Other questions on here mention that putting a picture of yourself in your resume could lead to you being discarded right away to avoid any potential discrimination lawsuits, but also that some regions actually expect a photo, and that men are more likely to get a callback if they put one in. That's also specific to putting a picture of yourself, and the effect could be different (for better or for worse) if the image actually contains crucial information for my resume.
This question already has an answer here:
Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?
6 answers
resume
asked Jul 8 '15 at 20:18
Nzall
2,75921733
2,75921733
marked as duplicate by David K, yochannah, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Community⦠Jul 10 '15 at 11:49
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by David K, yochannah, scaaahu, IDrinkandIKnowThings, Community⦠Jul 10 '15 at 11:49
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
4
What benefit do you expect to gain from this tactic?
â Kevin
Jul 8 '15 at 20:23
2
@DavidK I already mentioned that other question and the remarks they had in there in my own question, and how this is different. I don't think it's a duplicate.
â Nzall
Jul 8 '15 at 20:27
2
You also give your age, and a copy of your signature.
â mhoran_psprep
Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
2
@Nzall - you may see your personal information as "bland text", but the hiring manager see it as non-distracting and easy to read. Why draw so much attention to your name and other personal info when what you really want the employer to see is your experience? Further, For an electronically submitted resume, I might want to copy-and-paste your personal information into an email to a colleague "Hey Judy, can you contact XXXX at YYYY to set up an interview", but if all you've provided is an image, I can't do that so you've increased the chance of me making a typo that makes yourself unreachable.
â Johnny
Jul 9 '15 at 1:04
2
Are you in Belgium? My understanding is that in Europe it is common for CVs to contain a lot more information than is typically present in the United States, so for US readers keep this in mind (it'd be crazy to include this information on a resume in the United States). I was shocked when reviewing some CVs for colleagues in Germany to see how much information they put on them.
â Elysian Fieldsâ¦
Jul 9 '15 at 2:19
 |Â
show 4 more comments
4
What benefit do you expect to gain from this tactic?
â Kevin
Jul 8 '15 at 20:23
2
@DavidK I already mentioned that other question and the remarks they had in there in my own question, and how this is different. I don't think it's a duplicate.
â Nzall
Jul 8 '15 at 20:27
2
You also give your age, and a copy of your signature.
â mhoran_psprep
Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
2
@Nzall - you may see your personal information as "bland text", but the hiring manager see it as non-distracting and easy to read. Why draw so much attention to your name and other personal info when what you really want the employer to see is your experience? Further, For an electronically submitted resume, I might want to copy-and-paste your personal information into an email to a colleague "Hey Judy, can you contact XXXX at YYYY to set up an interview", but if all you've provided is an image, I can't do that so you've increased the chance of me making a typo that makes yourself unreachable.
â Johnny
Jul 9 '15 at 1:04
2
Are you in Belgium? My understanding is that in Europe it is common for CVs to contain a lot more information than is typically present in the United States, so for US readers keep this in mind (it'd be crazy to include this information on a resume in the United States). I was shocked when reviewing some CVs for colleagues in Germany to see how much information they put on them.
â Elysian Fieldsâ¦
Jul 9 '15 at 2:19
4
4
What benefit do you expect to gain from this tactic?
â Kevin
Jul 8 '15 at 20:23
What benefit do you expect to gain from this tactic?
â Kevin
Jul 8 '15 at 20:23
2
2
@DavidK I already mentioned that other question and the remarks they had in there in my own question, and how this is different. I don't think it's a duplicate.
â Nzall
Jul 8 '15 at 20:27
@DavidK I already mentioned that other question and the remarks they had in there in my own question, and how this is different. I don't think it's a duplicate.
â Nzall
Jul 8 '15 at 20:27
2
2
You also give your age, and a copy of your signature.
â mhoran_psprep
Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
You also give your age, and a copy of your signature.
â mhoran_psprep
Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
2
2
@Nzall - you may see your personal information as "bland text", but the hiring manager see it as non-distracting and easy to read. Why draw so much attention to your name and other personal info when what you really want the employer to see is your experience? Further, For an electronically submitted resume, I might want to copy-and-paste your personal information into an email to a colleague "Hey Judy, can you contact XXXX at YYYY to set up an interview", but if all you've provided is an image, I can't do that so you've increased the chance of me making a typo that makes yourself unreachable.
â Johnny
Jul 9 '15 at 1:04
@Nzall - you may see your personal information as "bland text", but the hiring manager see it as non-distracting and easy to read. Why draw so much attention to your name and other personal info when what you really want the employer to see is your experience? Further, For an electronically submitted resume, I might want to copy-and-paste your personal information into an email to a colleague "Hey Judy, can you contact XXXX at YYYY to set up an interview", but if all you've provided is an image, I can't do that so you've increased the chance of me making a typo that makes yourself unreachable.
â Johnny
Jul 9 '15 at 1:04
2
2
Are you in Belgium? My understanding is that in Europe it is common for CVs to contain a lot more information than is typically present in the United States, so for US readers keep this in mind (it'd be crazy to include this information on a resume in the United States). I was shocked when reviewing some CVs for colleagues in Germany to see how much information they put on them.
â Elysian Fieldsâ¦
Jul 9 '15 at 2:19
Are you in Belgium? My understanding is that in Europe it is common for CVs to contain a lot more information than is typically present in the United States, so for US readers keep this in mind (it'd be crazy to include this information on a resume in the United States). I was shocked when reviewing some CVs for colleagues in Germany to see how much information they put on them.
â Elysian Fieldsâ¦
Jul 9 '15 at 2:19
 |Â
show 4 more comments
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Don't do it.
Apart from the obvious standard "don't include your photo unless it's a model/actor CV" rule, like listed in Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?, consider the fact that you're replacing good indexable, copy-pasteable, searchable text content with non-computer-readable images.
You'd be doing yourself a disservice by making all that text notably less accessible, whether from a jobsite indexing point of view, a recruiter or HR department CTRL+F searching for content hidden in the image, or simply site SEO.
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I personally would worry about identity theft (they have your name, your birthdate and nationality) using this approach aside from the fact that it is a bad choice to use a picture unless it is the cultural norm in your country. Why would they care about your birthdate? That could cause discrimination as well. You are reaching the age whene age discrimination can be very real.
Plus if the information is actually needed in your country for the resume to get past HR, putting it into a photo means that it will get discarded by many automated systems because it is not in text.
Personally I would not recommend this approach.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
- It just feels weird and you have no reason to do so, I don't think it stands out positively. Scanned documents don't look good anyway.
- Scanning documents is in general a bad thing. You're exposing your signature, your document number, your birth location, the validity dates. That's all unnecessary information, and exposing your signature when not necessary is not a good practice considering that it can still be used in certain cases to pay with a credit card. The same goes for other information, it can be abused.
- Text on a photo is not searchable and copy-pasteable, that's horrible and might make a pdf CV in the archive unsearchable or cause HR extra work since they have to copy the information by hand.
- If it's a custom in your country too (probably considering that it's almost the same on most of continental Europe), you'd still have to write about your civil status, so you'd have one single information standing alone.
Just put the photo on the CV and write the data in normal text. You can play around with formatting if you want.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Disclaimer: I am not a professional recruiter.
I think it's bad idea.
- Information that is useful is not accessible - color patterns don't make legible backgrounds
- There's lots of information that isn't useful ("Belgian ID card" in 4 languages, the microchip)
- There's information that is not only unnecessary, but also should be kept private (ID card number, signature)
- The picture is relatively small and obscured by watermarks
- Not rure about rest of the world, but EU requirements for passport photos make virtually impossible to look good on one. Even if I wanted to put my photo on my resume, I wouldn't choose my passport one.
- Probably, when printed on standard office laser printer, it would appear as a black rectangle
Personally, if I see your resume printed, I'd assume that someone printed your CV on reused sheet of paper with ID photocopy or the other way round.
Personally, I think it is just unusual in a negative way.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
No
Think of it in their shoes, they are going through a pile of resumes and are trying to figure out if you can do the job in the shortest amount of time possible. When they come across your resume with all of that color, patterns, shapes, information sprawled across it like that they aren't even going to glance at your skills, it's immediately going in the trash and they are going to the next one in which they can go to the information they need to see.
You don't want to 'catch their eye' that's essential the same as 'trapping their eye' and you want them to see your skills and your experience, not a bunch of government printed gobly gook.
suggest improvements |Â
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Don't do it.
Apart from the obvious standard "don't include your photo unless it's a model/actor CV" rule, like listed in Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?, consider the fact that you're replacing good indexable, copy-pasteable, searchable text content with non-computer-readable images.
You'd be doing yourself a disservice by making all that text notably less accessible, whether from a jobsite indexing point of view, a recruiter or HR department CTRL+F searching for content hidden in the image, or simply site SEO.
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Don't do it.
Apart from the obvious standard "don't include your photo unless it's a model/actor CV" rule, like listed in Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?, consider the fact that you're replacing good indexable, copy-pasteable, searchable text content with non-computer-readable images.
You'd be doing yourself a disservice by making all that text notably less accessible, whether from a jobsite indexing point of view, a recruiter or HR department CTRL+F searching for content hidden in the image, or simply site SEO.
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
up vote
14
down vote
accepted
Don't do it.
Apart from the obvious standard "don't include your photo unless it's a model/actor CV" rule, like listed in Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?, consider the fact that you're replacing good indexable, copy-pasteable, searchable text content with non-computer-readable images.
You'd be doing yourself a disservice by making all that text notably less accessible, whether from a jobsite indexing point of view, a recruiter or HR department CTRL+F searching for content hidden in the image, or simply site SEO.
Don't do it.
Apart from the obvious standard "don't include your photo unless it's a model/actor CV" rule, like listed in Will putting my picture on my resume help me get the job easier while I'm not clearly asked to include it?, consider the fact that you're replacing good indexable, copy-pasteable, searchable text content with non-computer-readable images.
You'd be doing yourself a disservice by making all that text notably less accessible, whether from a jobsite indexing point of view, a recruiter or HR department CTRL+F searching for content hidden in the image, or simply site SEO.
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:48
Communityâ¦
1
1
answered Jul 8 '15 at 21:34
yochannah
4,21462747
4,21462747
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
suggest improvements |Â
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
Some places expect photos on CVs. But "photo" means a photo, it doesn't mean a scan of your ID card.
â Brandin
Jul 9 '15 at 6:22
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I personally would worry about identity theft (they have your name, your birthdate and nationality) using this approach aside from the fact that it is a bad choice to use a picture unless it is the cultural norm in your country. Why would they care about your birthdate? That could cause discrimination as well. You are reaching the age whene age discrimination can be very real.
Plus if the information is actually needed in your country for the resume to get past HR, putting it into a photo means that it will get discarded by many automated systems because it is not in text.
Personally I would not recommend this approach.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I personally would worry about identity theft (they have your name, your birthdate and nationality) using this approach aside from the fact that it is a bad choice to use a picture unless it is the cultural norm in your country. Why would they care about your birthdate? That could cause discrimination as well. You are reaching the age whene age discrimination can be very real.
Plus if the information is actually needed in your country for the resume to get past HR, putting it into a photo means that it will get discarded by many automated systems because it is not in text.
Personally I would not recommend this approach.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
I personally would worry about identity theft (they have your name, your birthdate and nationality) using this approach aside from the fact that it is a bad choice to use a picture unless it is the cultural norm in your country. Why would they care about your birthdate? That could cause discrimination as well. You are reaching the age whene age discrimination can be very real.
Plus if the information is actually needed in your country for the resume to get past HR, putting it into a photo means that it will get discarded by many automated systems because it is not in text.
Personally I would not recommend this approach.
I personally would worry about identity theft (they have your name, your birthdate and nationality) using this approach aside from the fact that it is a bad choice to use a picture unless it is the cultural norm in your country. Why would they care about your birthdate? That could cause discrimination as well. You are reaching the age whene age discrimination can be very real.
Plus if the information is actually needed in your country for the resume to get past HR, putting it into a photo means that it will get discarded by many automated systems because it is not in text.
Personally I would not recommend this approach.
answered Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
HLGEM
133k25226489
133k25226489
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
- It just feels weird and you have no reason to do so, I don't think it stands out positively. Scanned documents don't look good anyway.
- Scanning documents is in general a bad thing. You're exposing your signature, your document number, your birth location, the validity dates. That's all unnecessary information, and exposing your signature when not necessary is not a good practice considering that it can still be used in certain cases to pay with a credit card. The same goes for other information, it can be abused.
- Text on a photo is not searchable and copy-pasteable, that's horrible and might make a pdf CV in the archive unsearchable or cause HR extra work since they have to copy the information by hand.
- If it's a custom in your country too (probably considering that it's almost the same on most of continental Europe), you'd still have to write about your civil status, so you'd have one single information standing alone.
Just put the photo on the CV and write the data in normal text. You can play around with formatting if you want.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
- It just feels weird and you have no reason to do so, I don't think it stands out positively. Scanned documents don't look good anyway.
- Scanning documents is in general a bad thing. You're exposing your signature, your document number, your birth location, the validity dates. That's all unnecessary information, and exposing your signature when not necessary is not a good practice considering that it can still be used in certain cases to pay with a credit card. The same goes for other information, it can be abused.
- Text on a photo is not searchable and copy-pasteable, that's horrible and might make a pdf CV in the archive unsearchable or cause HR extra work since they have to copy the information by hand.
- If it's a custom in your country too (probably considering that it's almost the same on most of continental Europe), you'd still have to write about your civil status, so you'd have one single information standing alone.
Just put the photo on the CV and write the data in normal text. You can play around with formatting if you want.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
- It just feels weird and you have no reason to do so, I don't think it stands out positively. Scanned documents don't look good anyway.
- Scanning documents is in general a bad thing. You're exposing your signature, your document number, your birth location, the validity dates. That's all unnecessary information, and exposing your signature when not necessary is not a good practice considering that it can still be used in certain cases to pay with a credit card. The same goes for other information, it can be abused.
- Text on a photo is not searchable and copy-pasteable, that's horrible and might make a pdf CV in the archive unsearchable or cause HR extra work since they have to copy the information by hand.
- If it's a custom in your country too (probably considering that it's almost the same on most of continental Europe), you'd still have to write about your civil status, so you'd have one single information standing alone.
Just put the photo on the CV and write the data in normal text. You can play around with formatting if you want.
- It just feels weird and you have no reason to do so, I don't think it stands out positively. Scanned documents don't look good anyway.
- Scanning documents is in general a bad thing. You're exposing your signature, your document number, your birth location, the validity dates. That's all unnecessary information, and exposing your signature when not necessary is not a good practice considering that it can still be used in certain cases to pay with a credit card. The same goes for other information, it can be abused.
- Text on a photo is not searchable and copy-pasteable, that's horrible and might make a pdf CV in the archive unsearchable or cause HR extra work since they have to copy the information by hand.
- If it's a custom in your country too (probably considering that it's almost the same on most of continental Europe), you'd still have to write about your civil status, so you'd have one single information standing alone.
Just put the photo on the CV and write the data in normal text. You can play around with formatting if you want.
answered Jul 8 '15 at 22:03
Formagella
21227
21227
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Disclaimer: I am not a professional recruiter.
I think it's bad idea.
- Information that is useful is not accessible - color patterns don't make legible backgrounds
- There's lots of information that isn't useful ("Belgian ID card" in 4 languages, the microchip)
- There's information that is not only unnecessary, but also should be kept private (ID card number, signature)
- The picture is relatively small and obscured by watermarks
- Not rure about rest of the world, but EU requirements for passport photos make virtually impossible to look good on one. Even if I wanted to put my photo on my resume, I wouldn't choose my passport one.
- Probably, when printed on standard office laser printer, it would appear as a black rectangle
Personally, if I see your resume printed, I'd assume that someone printed your CV on reused sheet of paper with ID photocopy or the other way round.
Personally, I think it is just unusual in a negative way.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
Disclaimer: I am not a professional recruiter.
I think it's bad idea.
- Information that is useful is not accessible - color patterns don't make legible backgrounds
- There's lots of information that isn't useful ("Belgian ID card" in 4 languages, the microchip)
- There's information that is not only unnecessary, but also should be kept private (ID card number, signature)
- The picture is relatively small and obscured by watermarks
- Not rure about rest of the world, but EU requirements for passport photos make virtually impossible to look good on one. Even if I wanted to put my photo on my resume, I wouldn't choose my passport one.
- Probably, when printed on standard office laser printer, it would appear as a black rectangle
Personally, if I see your resume printed, I'd assume that someone printed your CV on reused sheet of paper with ID photocopy or the other way round.
Personally, I think it is just unusual in a negative way.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Disclaimer: I am not a professional recruiter.
I think it's bad idea.
- Information that is useful is not accessible - color patterns don't make legible backgrounds
- There's lots of information that isn't useful ("Belgian ID card" in 4 languages, the microchip)
- There's information that is not only unnecessary, but also should be kept private (ID card number, signature)
- The picture is relatively small and obscured by watermarks
- Not rure about rest of the world, but EU requirements for passport photos make virtually impossible to look good on one. Even if I wanted to put my photo on my resume, I wouldn't choose my passport one.
- Probably, when printed on standard office laser printer, it would appear as a black rectangle
Personally, if I see your resume printed, I'd assume that someone printed your CV on reused sheet of paper with ID photocopy or the other way round.
Personally, I think it is just unusual in a negative way.
Disclaimer: I am not a professional recruiter.
I think it's bad idea.
- Information that is useful is not accessible - color patterns don't make legible backgrounds
- There's lots of information that isn't useful ("Belgian ID card" in 4 languages, the microchip)
- There's information that is not only unnecessary, but also should be kept private (ID card number, signature)
- The picture is relatively small and obscured by watermarks
- Not rure about rest of the world, but EU requirements for passport photos make virtually impossible to look good on one. Even if I wanted to put my photo on my resume, I wouldn't choose my passport one.
- Probably, when printed on standard office laser printer, it would appear as a black rectangle
Personally, if I see your resume printed, I'd assume that someone printed your CV on reused sheet of paper with ID photocopy or the other way round.
Personally, I think it is just unusual in a negative way.
answered Jul 9 '15 at 16:41
el.pescado
1014
1014
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No
Think of it in their shoes, they are going through a pile of resumes and are trying to figure out if you can do the job in the shortest amount of time possible. When they come across your resume with all of that color, patterns, shapes, information sprawled across it like that they aren't even going to glance at your skills, it's immediately going in the trash and they are going to the next one in which they can go to the information they need to see.
You don't want to 'catch their eye' that's essential the same as 'trapping their eye' and you want them to see your skills and your experience, not a bunch of government printed gobly gook.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
No
Think of it in their shoes, they are going through a pile of resumes and are trying to figure out if you can do the job in the shortest amount of time possible. When they come across your resume with all of that color, patterns, shapes, information sprawled across it like that they aren't even going to glance at your skills, it's immediately going in the trash and they are going to the next one in which they can go to the information they need to see.
You don't want to 'catch their eye' that's essential the same as 'trapping their eye' and you want them to see your skills and your experience, not a bunch of government printed gobly gook.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
No
Think of it in their shoes, they are going through a pile of resumes and are trying to figure out if you can do the job in the shortest amount of time possible. When they come across your resume with all of that color, patterns, shapes, information sprawled across it like that they aren't even going to glance at your skills, it's immediately going in the trash and they are going to the next one in which they can go to the information they need to see.
You don't want to 'catch their eye' that's essential the same as 'trapping their eye' and you want them to see your skills and your experience, not a bunch of government printed gobly gook.
No
Think of it in their shoes, they are going through a pile of resumes and are trying to figure out if you can do the job in the shortest amount of time possible. When they come across your resume with all of that color, patterns, shapes, information sprawled across it like that they aren't even going to glance at your skills, it's immediately going in the trash and they are going to the next one in which they can go to the information they need to see.
You don't want to 'catch their eye' that's essential the same as 'trapping their eye' and you want them to see your skills and your experience, not a bunch of government printed gobly gook.
answered Jul 9 '15 at 17:03
user37925
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What benefit do you expect to gain from this tactic?
â Kevin
Jul 8 '15 at 20:23
2
@DavidK I already mentioned that other question and the remarks they had in there in my own question, and how this is different. I don't think it's a duplicate.
â Nzall
Jul 8 '15 at 20:27
2
You also give your age, and a copy of your signature.
â mhoran_psprep
Jul 8 '15 at 20:28
2
@Nzall - you may see your personal information as "bland text", but the hiring manager see it as non-distracting and easy to read. Why draw so much attention to your name and other personal info when what you really want the employer to see is your experience? Further, For an electronically submitted resume, I might want to copy-and-paste your personal information into an email to a colleague "Hey Judy, can you contact XXXX at YYYY to set up an interview", but if all you've provided is an image, I can't do that so you've increased the chance of me making a typo that makes yourself unreachable.
â Johnny
Jul 9 '15 at 1:04
2
Are you in Belgium? My understanding is that in Europe it is common for CVs to contain a lot more information than is typically present in the United States, so for US readers keep this in mind (it'd be crazy to include this information on a resume in the United States). I was shocked when reviewing some CVs for colleagues in Germany to see how much information they put on them.
â Elysian Fieldsâ¦
Jul 9 '15 at 2:19