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JDMurray wrote: » Isn't there an MS Excel cert? I hear having certifications is a good way to summarize professional experience. OK, seriously... Excel is probably the #1 business application on this planet. People who are truly proficient in Excel are worth their weight in dark matter (assuming you can find any first). That being said, there is no way I can think of to get this point across to someone who doesn't understand the value of extreme Excel skills using only a sentence or two on a resume. Describing your talents from several wide angles, such as having Excel certs, instructing Excel classes, writing VBA and .NET Excel add-ins, etc. will raise a few knowledgeable eyebrows. But all that will be lost on people who think Excel is only used for balancing budgets and printing mailing lists.
N2IT wrote: » First the PMP though
N2IT wrote: » Without the risk of sounding very amature, can you somehow call out expert use on your resume regarding the MS Suite? In particular MS Excel? I've been using it for over 10 years and now support high level functionality of the tool. Reporting, Pivot Tables, Text lookups like V and H, IF statements out the arse, Charting, etc. I assistant analyst, researchers, doctors, executives etc with these tools. Any ideas how to tactifully mention this on a resume? Sorry for the random question, but I have been doing some thinking about it and I don't want to look like a fool, however in the business environment I have found that I trump most users and I would like to leverage that and call it out to potential future employers. Thanks in advance.
JDMurray wrote: » And then there are the people who try to use Excel for PM when they should be using MS Project. My personal cross is people that use Excel then they should be be using Access or SQL server. Yes, there is some overlap in functionality of Excel/Access, but there just comes a time when your historical data needs to be in a relational database and accessed using a proper query language, not spread across multiple workbooks and searched using macros.
JDMurray wrote: » My personal cross is people that use Excel then they should be be using Access or SQL server.
RobertKaucher wrote: » Don't even get me started! The stuff I have seen in the wild... Like a project resource loading app for a many time multi-million dollar company written in Excel.
N2IT wrote: I've never been on a project that used MS project always Excel LOL. I'm not saying I agree with it, but most of the PM's I have worked under perform tool sets they know
N2IT wrote: » I've been using it for over 10 years and now support high level functionality of the tool. Reporting, Pivot Tables, Text lookups like V and H, IF statements out the arse, Charting, etc. I assistant analyst, researchers, doctors, executives etc with these tools.
Slowhand wrote: » Personally, I think using what you've written here sums it up pretty nicely. You could re-write what you've got there with the proper '10 years experience with Excel. . . ' resume-tense, and I'd say you were in good shape. Oh, and keep the 'out the arse' bit, that's my favorite part.
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