Print
your résumé on a high-quality, light-colored paper (white,
off-white, or very light gray). Never use papers with a
background (pictures, marble shades, or speckles). The scanner
tries to interpret the patterns and dots as letters. This is a
good rule to follow even for paper résumés that will never
be scanned. Often companies will photocopy your résumé to
hand to a hiring manager, and dark colors or patterns will
simply turn into dark masses that make your résumé difficult
to read. If a company has multiple locations, the original résumé
may even get faxed from one site to another and the same thing
happens.
Avoid
using photocopies of your résumé. Original laser printed
masters are best, although a high-quality inkjet printer is
acceptable. Do not use a dot matrix printer since the letters
sometimes touch each other or are not solid.
Print on
only one side of the page and use standard-size, 8˝ × 11
paper. The scanner cannot turn your page over, so the reverse
side might be missed when the clerk puts your résumé into
the automatic document feeder. That same process is the reason
why you should not use 11 × 17 size paper. The pages would
have to be cut into 8˝ × 11 sheets and the printing on the
reverse side would not get scanned.
Don't
fold your résumé since the creases make it harder to scan.
It is much better to invest in flat, 9 × 12 envelopes and an
extra two bits of postage to make a good first impression.
Laser print and copier toner tend to crack off the page when
creased, making the letters on the fold line less than solid,
which a scanner could easily misinterpret. Staple holes can
cause pages to stick together, so never put a staple in a résumé
you know will be scanned.
Now that
you know all the secrets for designing a résumé that will
pass the scannability test, let's look at some sample résumés
that scanned well.