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Just don't put years worked at a job on the resume. I never have and I've never been asked. Most relevant jobs go first.


I was always told obfuscating the dates and/or going with a "functional" resume just screamed "old" :)


If you want recommendations on what to avoid, an 8 page resume that starts out by listing your high school summer job in the 1960's is the best anti-example I've seen.


I was taught to leave the month off your start and end dates of previous positions when applying for a job. Still don’t know if this is a good idea or not, but at the very least it opens up another dialog tree with potential employers. Seems to have worked fine for me, but who knows. The rationale was “it’s less information to parse”. Might be just a superstition.

Interviewers always ask for more specifics anyways, which is good because you can use that as an opportunity to jump into things you accomplished near the end of a job, or at the beginning of another.


I wasn't taught to do this, but also do it. I doubt it helps or hurts either way.


> obfuscating the dates

I don't put dates on at all. I never have, even when I was 20.




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