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Free Outline for Truck Driver Resumes

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So, you're looking for a truck driver job. So are many other Americans, meaning that you better be 100% willing and ready to work hard to put your best foot forward.

Your first impression is made via your truck driver resume, and that's exactly what this article tackles.

Here is an outline of what you need to include on a truck driving resume.

Experience
If you are looking for a trucking job and you have years of valuable experience, you had better bet that that is the number one most important thing that you must elaborate on throughout your truck driving resume.

Trucking job experience is invaluable and it must be well written into a truck driving resume.


If you have one or more years of trucking job experience, make sure that it's the very first thing that you list on your truck driver resume.

List the name of your employer and the dates from which you worked for them. Use the CDL resume to list what your duties were with the company and make mention of any kinds of promotions that you received on the job, if any.

Credentials
The second most important part of your trucking resume is going to be where you received your truck driving training.

Notice that I've omitted including "when" you got your training on your truck drivers resume.

The only time that you should put when you finished your training on a resume for truck driving is in the occasion that you are a very recent graduate.

A CDL resume should otherwise focus on what class of CDL was attained and what specializations were earned (i.e. HAZMAT, passenger, etc).

If you are a brand new graduate of CDL training, you are going to want to list "Credentials" ahead of the point where you list "Experience".

This is because if you just got your CDL training, you likely have work experience, but in feilds other than truck driving.

If you have other work experience, it will most definitely still count and you want to list it, but make sure that you list credentials first.

References
References are a big deal when it comes to truck driver resumes, probably more than in any other job sector.

Include 2-3 solid references of people who can attest to your truck driving capacity and dependability as an employee.

Make sure to leave their names and their contact information, as well as what their professional relationship is to you.

Never, ever put "references available upon request" on any resume, especially not a truck driving resume.

Now, once your brilliant truck driving resume has landed you an interview, don't think that the rest is a cake walk.

Because competition is so tight right now, you still have a lot of work to do. Dress well for the interview-even though you don't have to dress well on the job.

It will make a good first impression and make it more likely that your persona lines up with the image the employer has in mind after reading your great truck driver resume.





Comments

Jul 19, 2010 3:00pm
Jerky
This is a great resource, especially given current economic conditions. It's interesting what the different industries value in a potential employee, as the things the truck companies are looking for are vastly different from, say, a law firm. Lawyers are notorious for spending more time explaining where/when they went to school than they do chatting up their professional experience. Truckers are the exact opposite.
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