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Tani305 Posted 11 years ago
Vocabulary

cv review

hello can someonecheck my CV and correct if there are mistakes? thanks in advance!!

Receptionist
Checking guests in and out, confirm reservations, meeting and greeting, dealing with any enquiries at the reception.

House Master
Running weekly activities, help cook, housekeeping.

Translator
Converting a website from English and French into Italian and ensuring that the finished converted articles relay the intended message as clearly as possible.

Internship
Offering face to face and telephone advice to customers and provide relevant information and brochures, making travel and accommodation reservations, checking the availability of the chosen holiday by telephone or computer, enter data into the software and maintain client files, completing tourist and business travel Visas.

Secretary
In addition to the tasks continued to perform during the apprenticeship (see previous work experience): accounting (annual closing of accounts), collaborating to close the business, Preparing year-end payroll.

General correspondence, cash managment, front office activities (e.g. answering phone calls, etc.), maintaining and updating financial records, schedule meetings and conference rooms

computer skills
Door Security System: operations of check-in and check-out of clients.
WebRezPro: edit/changes reservations, checking room aviability, invoices and payments.
Umbrella: cash managment, creating new costumers.
CRM: creating new costumers.
Banana Accounting 5.0: daily cash book, post, bank,debtors,
creditors, annual closing of accounts.
Good Knowledge of Microsoft Office:
Word: word processing, mail merge, indexes, flow charts;
Excel: creating charts, grafics, formulas, tables;
Outlook: organizing incoming and outgoing mail, creating contact groups, creating appointments;
PowerPoint: creating presentations with slides.

THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!
  

Top answer

You will need to use a standard CV format. You may find this online, where you will also find advice on mistakes to avoid. The standard format requires identification and contact information at the top, followed by sections (dated and in reverse chronological order) for job experience, education, publications, skills, and so on.

  • You will need to use a standard CV format.
  • You may find this online, where you will also find advice on mistakes to avoid.
  • The standard format requires identification and contact information at the top, followed by sections (dated and in reverse chronological order) for job experience, education, publications, skills, and so on.
  • You're missing some information, but what you have isn't bad; it just needs to be in the right format.
  • " Pick the one that doesn't belong and make it into a gerund like he rest.
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2 Answers
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You will need to use a standard CV format. You may find this online, where you will also find advice on mistakes to avoid. The standard format requires identification and contact information at the top, followed by sections (dated and in reverse chronological order) for job experience, education, publications, skills, and so on. You're missing some information, but what you have isn't bad; it j
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It's not clear which activities were associated with which jobs you held. List your jobs with dates, starting with the most recent. Indicate if you supervised other people.

Your education is missing.

A general skills section should have languages (proficiency) and computer skills.

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