A Curriculum Vitaé (CV) is a written overview of the person's experience and other qualifications that a potential employer seeks about a job-seeker and is supposed to be carried by tenured applicants looking for a job change.
A CV can be easily mistaken for a résumé, however, there is a notable difference. A résumé is supposed to be carried by applicants with no relevant career experience or no experience whatsoever. On the other hand, CVs are to be carried by candidates with relevant experience.
As with the résumé, we will be discussing a widely accepted template. A CV normally includes the following elements −
● Name − Full name of the applicant without general salutations like Mr., Ms.
● Address − the permanent address.
● Summary − a brief description of what you have achieved in your profession.
● Academic Qualification − your academic qualification
● Additional Knowledge − Skills you have acquired beyond your profession.
● Acquired Skills − Soft Skills
● Programming Languages − if any
● Software Tools − Software tools you use in your profession (MS Word, Excel)
● Operating System Platforms − operating system you use (Windows, Mac)
● Database Management System − if any
● Personal Skills − soft skills
● Experience Breakdown − detailed explanation of your experience
● Achievements & Interests − Hobbies. Achievements in professional life
● Declaration − stating all information provided about the applicant as true.
NOTE − Fields marked (e, g, j) will change as per applicant’s area of expertise. Points (h, i) are considered parts of a general template now, as almost all the companies now expect the candidates to have basic computer proficiency on some specific software tool (MS Word, MS Excel, etc…).