Dear Sir or Madam,
Your recruiting advertisement for Resident Doctor on is of great interests to me. I had Practicing doctors license on 2009, Master of lymphoma Cancer Hospital Fu Dan university, Clinical round-robin in Cancer Hospital Skilled at kinds of clinical procedures and surgery skills from January 2011 to January 2012, I am submitting my resume and wish to apply for the position referred above.
I had accumulate extensive diagnostic and multidisciplinary expertise in managing hematolymphoid disorders in medical school. In addition to my academic excellence, my various aptitudes displayed in extra curriculum activities combined with fluent English ability as well as proficient IT skills prepare me a qualified candidate., I hold the belief that I will make positive contribution to your Hospital.
Thank you for your time and consideration and I am looking forward to becoming an integral member of your motivated team and would appreciate your evaluation by granting me an interview.
With best regards.
Sincerely yours,
Practical Resume Tips
These tips are for your traditional resume, not your scannable/ASCII resume. They are for the human readers who will appreciate a nicely formatted document!
1. Margins. Are your margins set at 1" or 1.25"? Try 0.4" top margin (above your header); 0.5" bottom margin; and 0.8" left and right margins.
2. Font Size. Try reducing your font size, even by 0.5pt. Acceptable font size depends on the font you are using. I recommend actually *printing* the resume to see how it looks on paper. Radical? Maybe. But worth it. Looking at a hard copy will ensure that you do NOT reduce the font size so much that it leaves your readers squinting!
3. Header. Your header does not have to take up 4 lines. Many resumes have a header that looks like this (and takes up way more space than necessary):
(centered)
Joe Smith
123 ABC Street
Anytown, US 12345
212-555-1234
email address here
Alternatively, consider something like:
Joe Smith
123 ABC Street, Anytown, US 12345 (bullet) 212-555-1234 (bullet) email address here (all on one line!)
(insert graphic line here)
See how you have magically saved three lines that can be used for substantive information?
4. Space between blurbs and sections. You don#39;t need to put an entire space between experience blurbs or sections of your resume. Instead, if you currently have full spaces between entries, try this:
a. Delete the space that is currently there.
b. Put your cursor at the beginning of the line.
c. Go to the Paragraph menu or Page Layout menu.
d. Insert a 6pt space before or after the line, as appropriate.
If you insert a 6pt space before or after a line, it will almost always be a smaller space than the one you create by putting in a full line of space. How many extra lines can you squeeze from your resume with this trick?