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Your Questions About Stay At Home Mom Resume

Lisa asks…

How to explain stay-at-home mom on resume?

Anyone out there good with resumes? I have a spotty work history. I stayed at home with my daughter from age 20-27 and I only worked when we needed the money. As soon as we were back on our feet I would stay at home again. Also I attended 2 years of college part time. How can I build a resume with this? My daughter is in school now and I am ready to rejoin the workforce for good. But employers might see this as flaky.

Yigly Admin answers:

It could be as simple as putting
“Full-time homemaker 2003-present”

Don’t over inflate your time as a mother and definitely don’t undermine it, especially when it’s for such a large portion of your adult life.

For a working man, it may be hard to understand exactly what is involved in staying at home. Exemplify successful time management skills, working under stress, multitasking, etc. Think about what this 7 years has taught you, and make example of it for them.

List some activities that you did, volunteer work, college, or school/child related functions you helped out with.

The Objective might be the perfect way to say that you are a mom, you have that straightened away, now you’re back and you are serious about getting a job or even a career

I hope this helps, it’s just some thoughts of my own. I wish the best of luck to you, it’s tough out there these days, but there are jobs.

Thomas asks…

How will a stay at home mom make a resume to apply for a job?

I’ve been a stay at home mom for 8 years and I want to work again since my kids are all growing up. How should I compose my resume if my work experiences are so old?

Yigly Admin answers:

Do you have any volunteer experience? If so, put it on your resume.

Donald asks…

Instead of using the title stay at home mom on my resume, what other title can I use?

I am revamping my resume and I am looking for another title to use instead of stay at home mom or homemaker.

Yigly Admin answers:

Don’t put that on your resume. I can guarentee you won’t get a call back. I would just put your last job on your resume and maybe have an area for skills…such as organization, etc that you can talk to in an interview.

You should mention the gap in your employment history in your cover letter though. You have to put it out there what you were doing.

Michael asks…

Stay at home mom needs help writing resume?

I have been a stay at home mom for the last 3 years while my husband has served in the Marine Corps. We are getting out soon and I need some advice on how to update my resume to document what I have been doing the last 3 years. Anyone have any clever ideas how to word a stay at home mom / military wife? Thanks!

Yigly Admin answers:

I would leave it out of your resume, unless you plan on applying for jobs that use the skills that a stay-at-home mother uses, ie. Nanny/house keeper.
Otherwise leave the resume as work experience only, and say in your cover letter that you’ve been raising your family for the past 3 years, and are eager to return to the workplace.

Lizzie asks…

How do you fill a 7yr gap on your resume (stay at home mom) and still seem qualified?

I don’t want to seem unqualified, because I know I’m not. But is there a specific way to let a potential employer know that you’ve been raising a family for the last 7yrs on your resume?

Yigly Admin answers:

First and foremost, don’t apologize for being a good mother. Most employers understand that women would like the opportunity to mother their children.
Let your previous experience speak for itself, and display a professional appearance and a desire to work hard to earn a spot in todays work force.

William asks…

What would be a good resume for a stay at home mom?

I have been a stay at home Mom now for 5 years and would like to get a part time job.Do you think it is Still ok to fill out a resume including the skills I have learned being a homemaker?

Yigly Admin answers:

You could put:
maintained inventory supplies (bought groceries)
managed cash flow/output (paid bills)
organized work load (planned the housework schedule)
meet deadlines (take the kids to appointments, soccer etc)
time management (prepare meals on time, pick up kids from school)

A few ideas for you. I’m sure you do more during your day.

Steven asks…

can you help me inprove my Stay at Home Mom resume? thanks =)?

here is my resume, I have very little work experience and a lot of MOMMY experience! =) i NEED to impress future employers with my skills, and I’d really like to create a STAND OUT RESUME. I am looking to get into either retail, secretarial work, or waiting tables, any suggestions on improvement would be AWESOME! I am not wanting to RE-DO the whole thing (unless its THAT BAD lol) thanks a bunch and wish me luck =D

MY NAME
ADDRESS
PHONE #

REAL LIFE SKILLS

Stay at Home Mother, (July 2006-Present)
I effectively manage time and balance schedules for a family of four.
I have wonderful interpersonal skills, constantly organizing play dates and social events.
I am able to balance and maintain a strict budget.
I can cook healthy, and budget friendly meals for groups of four to nine people.
I am a very thorough, and detail oriented cleaner. I like to keep my surroundings tidy and orginized, in order to maintain a well flowing work enviroment.
Great multitasker and wonderful time management skills.

EMPLOYMENT HISTORY

Custodian, Charter Academy, MY CITY, MI (Dec. 2005-July 2006)
Self motivated janitorial position.
Cleaning and maintenance of Jr. High and K-3 section of a charter school, including a library, four full bathrooms, approximately 13 classrooms and a gymnasium.
Indoor Painting, Minor building repairs, Floor cleaning, Stocking and use of cleaning chemicals, Dusting, Taking out trash, recycling and many other miscellaneous jobs.
Providing students, parents and visitors with cleaning assistance and information about the facility on a daily basis.

Taco Bell. MY CITY, MI (January 2005-Dec 2005)
Handling drive thru and cash register sales.
Assisting in training new employees.
Opening and closing of the restaurant.
Food preparation.
Daily cleaning of the facility and parking lot.

EDUCATION & STRENGTHS

Certificate- Culinary Arts, GASC MY CITY MI (2003-2005)
High School Diploma- MY High School, MY CITY, MI (2001-2005)
Current Food Handlers Card.
Strong communication skills, I tend to work and dialogue well with all types of people.
Great computer skills.

Yigly Admin answers:

Resume Tips for Full-Time Parents Returning to Work
By Kim Isaacs, Monster Resume Expert

The latest figures from the US Census Bureau indicate 5 million women and 154,000 men are stay-at-home parents. Although the Census Bureau doesn’t track the number returning to work, hundreds of thousands of parents decide to venture back to the workplace every year. These tips will help you get your resume noticed despite the employment gap.

Highlight Related Activities

You need to convince employers that you have the skills and experience to do the job, so your resume’s content must actively sell you. When writing about your time out of the paid workforce, include only those activities that back up the skills relevant to your career goal.

“Most women who stay at home for a period of time are not just doing laundry and homework oversight,” says Kathryn Sollmann, cofounder of Women at Work Network, an organization dedicated to helping women reenter the workforce. “Most women are involved in significant volunteer efforts, and that is the experience that should be included in a resume.” Sollmann successfully returned to the workforce by leveraging her volunteer and freelance experience.

You can highlight the following activities on your resume:

Volunteer/Community Involvement (PTA, Charity Work, Fund-raisers): Just because you weren’t paid doesn’t make the experience any less valuable, so treat volunteer work like you would a paid position on your resume. If you held leadership roles or made a difference to your organizations, tout your accomplishments and the key skills developed. You can include volunteer work in your Work Experience section to cover the employment gap.

Continuing Education: Show that you’ve kept your skills refreshed through courses, online learning and/or independent study.

Freelance Projects: If you’ve done consulting/freelance work that’s related to your job target, include project highlights in your Work Experience section.

Professional Development: Demonstrate your commitment to the field by including membership in professional organizations and participation in conferences.

Work-at-Home/Self-Employment: Even if you worked part-time for yourself or your partner, include the experience on your resume.

Should You Use a Job Title?

There’s conflicting advice about whether to give yourself a job title and job description for your role as a parent. If your homemaker activities are related to your job target, it makes sense to draw attention to your parenting activities and accomplishments. For example, if you are looking for a job in teaching/day care or working for an organization serving children, you could emphasize the relevant experience of child care and incidental teaching as a stay-at-home parent. Examples of job titles parents have used include: household manager, manager — Jones family and family CEO.

For most people, though, it’s best to avoid including parenting as an actual job on the resume. “We personally feel that there is no need to dress up time at home with silly titles like ‘domestic engineer,’” says Sollmann. “The important thing is to identify how you have continued to use your business skills in the time you have been out of the workforce. And if you truly have had nothing but child care and household responsibilities, it would be a good idea to get involved in some volunteer activities that require business skills — managing committees, writing newsletters, handling budgets, etc.”

Select the Best Resume Format

According to Linda Matias, president of CareerStrides, the right resume format is critical to getting noticed. Matias suggests that parents avoid chronological resumes and consider using a combination resume format. A chronological resume can eliminate a parent’s candidacy in seconds, she says.

Parents who have been out of the workforce for a number of years and have minimal alternative experience such as volunteer work may need a functional resume. Although functional resumes are not preferred by hiring managers, this format allows you to emphasize your skills while downplaying your employment history.

Be Honest

Use your cover letter to briefly explain your recent gap, but emphasize that you have kept your skills up to date and are energized to return to the workforce.

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