Understanding
the Technology
by
ResumeEdge.com
- The Net's Premier Resume Writing and Editing Service
When your paper résumé
is received by a human resource department that uses a computerized
applicant tracking system, your résumé must first be transferred from
paper into binary information that a computer can read before it can be
stored in the résumé database. This is accomplished with a scanner that
is connected to a computer running a special kind of software that can
examine the dots of ink on your printed page and determine by their shapes
which letters they represent. This is called optical character
recognition, or OCR for short.
This software
matches patterns with sets of characters stored in its memory, which is
one of the reasons why it is important to choose a type style (or font)
for your résumé that conforms to normal letter shapes. If you use a
highly decorative type style, the OCR software will have difficulty making
matches and will misinterpret letters. This means your words won't be
spelled correctly, which of course means that a keyword search for the
word bookkeeping will never turn up your résumé if the OCR thought you
typed bmkkeepmg.
For now, let's
assume that you have designed a résumé that the scanner can read. First,
depending on the company's procedures, your résumé will be received
directly by the recruiter assigned to fill a certain position (if the job
was advertised) or by the human resource department in general (if you
have sent your résumé unsolicited).
When the recruiter
has finished reviewing your information, your résumé is added to the
stacks of résumés to be processed by the computer that day. A clerk will
then put your résumé into the automatic feeder bin of a flatbed scanner,
separating your résumé from the one above and below it with a blank
piece of paper. Within seconds, the scanner has passed its light over your
pieces of paper and the software interprets the black dots of ink as
letters of the alphabet. The computer then begins extracting information
to fill in its electronic form, which will become part of your résumé in
cyberspace.