I'm going to go against the grain here. I think the right length is as long as you need it to be--as long as you are careful not to include irrelevant or redundant information and as long as it is well written and clearly formatted. I've seen too many people try to cram too much information on one sheet just to hit that magical one page limit, but they use a font that is too small to read and a format that is wordy and hard to follow.
Since entering the professional world a million years ago, I haven't seen any good resumes that are just one page except for those of people who just graduated from college. If you've had decent work experience, you're going to go onto two pages. And in academia, two pages would be the work of a neophyte--once you add in all of your publications you're absolutely going to stray onto four pages or more. But that's something different.
You don't need to include every job, obviously, and you don't need to explain the job requirements of all of the jobs. The norm now is to tailor your resume to the job you're trying to get, so you'd want to include the jobs where you learned the skills you'd need in this new position, but leave out anything more than your most recent two or three jobs unless they are extremely relevant to the position you want. Save the explanation of soft skills for the cover letter and resume--the assumption from an employer is that everyone comes with certain soft skills that will be helpful, and everyone has a different cocktail of these skills. The interview is where those come out. Same thing with showing continuity of employment and that you're not afraid to work--they're going to assume that to be the case unless your resume shows big gaps of time not working (years, mostly, and only after age 21 or so). In fact, showing multiple short term jobs may work against you, no matter how interesting those jobs were--they might look at lots of short term jobs and think "geez, this woman can't keep a job. What's wrong with her?"
So I'd worry less about the length and more about the content and how it's presented. I'm more likely to toss a resume if I can't find what I'm looking for or if it is simply badly presented.
Good luck!
Sarah



Reply With Quote
I've gotten every job I've ever interviewed for and I've gotten lots of intereview requests, so I don't think it's hurt me at all.
