If you’re a recent law school graduate and have had the benefit of focused advice and counselling from your law school’s career services office, you are probably well-versed in the following basic resume preparation guidelines.

If you’ve not received resume counselling recently, you may find it worth your while to review some of the basics.  Here are some key tips to ensure that you’re putting your best foot forward during every step of the job-hunting process.

-Don’t send the same generic resume out for every job opening. Yes, crafting a new resume can be tedious and time-consuming, especially if you’re applying to a number of jobs.  Yet if you’re not doing so, you’re not tailoring your description of your past experience to the specific needs of the hiring company  – which is a key mistake.

-Don’t simply list job responsibilities. While you do want to let potential employers know what you’ve done in the past, stating the positions you’ve had and a dry rundown of what you’ve done, will not win you any points.  In many practice settings in the legal world, it’s assumed that your roles include certain responsibilities. The job of your resume is to highlight what you’ve excelled at and what you’ve accomplished, not to act as a rote recitation of basic core skills.

-Don’t have an endless resume. Try to keep it to one page, unless you’ve been working for many years. Multi-page resumes are unwieldy and easy to lose.

-Don’t make the reader need a magnifying glass to read your resume. Yes, you want to have as much information as possible there, but it should also be easily readable. Going below an 11-point font could be a recipe for disaster, as you know how it’s difficult to find a lawyer with 20/20 vision.

-Don’t use flash, graphics, or colored paper. Your background and experience should speak for itself; going with anything too cutesy or eye-catching is risky, and may backfire. That might have a better chance of working in a creative field, but not in the legal profession.

-Don’t get too personal. While it’s fine to include some of your hobbies and interest on your resume, don’t go overboard, and steer clear of anything that might be controversial, such as political affiliation. While it’s unlikely that someone reading your resume will look down on a person who plays ice hockey as a hobby, the same can not be said for a political activist who happens to be on the other side of the reader’s personal politics.

While these tips are somewhat basic, it can be surprising just how many resumes flagrantly flaunt at least one of these, and how many jobs are lost because of that. Don’t let your resume be one of those that works against you, rather than for you. Once you’re finished with your legal resume, create a free attorney job seeker profile on Lawmatch and find the best attorney jobs and law firms hiring on Lawmatch.