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greekboy 15th Jan 2010 10:15

Format For Emailing Cv's
 
Good day to you all.

I have a question regarding the format in which to send cv's by email if the job advertised does not specify a preference in program type e.g. pdf, word etc.

thanx

Whirlygig 15th Jan 2010 11:56

EIther .pdf or Word would be fine.Just don't use a .txt or something that doesn't allow decent formatting.

Cheers

Whirls

greekboy 15th Jan 2010 12:23

Thanx for the info

gb

Phenom100 15th Jan 2010 12:45

I would be real careful using word, as there are too many versions out there which are NOT compatible with each other.

Best stick with Pdf.

Phenom100

Trolle 15th Jan 2010 13:33

When emailing CVs or applications I use PDF so there is no concern regarding formatting.

I sometimes do a copy-paste of my CV in the bottom of my email. I have a text-only version that I am sure will show up correctly in the email. I write in the body text that I have done this in case of technical problems. You never know, sometimes people are weary of opening attachments, spam/filter problems, etc. However, this is usually to recipients that have not specifically requested an online CV.

Good luck.

greekboy 15th Jan 2010 14:22

Thanx a million for the information. Out of interest what software do you use for writing pdf documents. Been searching the web and there are loads. Some are very expensive too.

thanx

gb

Dane-Ger 15th Jan 2010 14:38

You definately have to watch out with word, I wrote my CV on one version of word, I then tested it on my laptop, which has another version, just to check that the formatting worked, which it did. No problem I thought.

I then proceeded to send out my CV to all and sundry, only to find that when I opened the CV on a third computer at work a couple of weeks later, it suddenly was one and a half pages long due to the column formatting being out of line (it looked terrible) :ugh:

I am now a pdf convert!

Tinstaafl 16th Jan 2010 01:44

Greekboy, Openoffice.org can save directly to PDF, as well as M$ Office formats. It's free and downloadable from OpenOffice.org - The Free and Open Productivity Suite

Capetonian 16th Jan 2010 11:13

Another advantage of .pdf files is that they cannot (easily) be modified, which is why lawyers and accountants use them.

AlphaMale 16th Jan 2010 15:34


Out of interest what software do you use for writing pdf documents. Been searching the web and there are loads. Some are very expensive too.
I have Adobe Acrobat Professional in work and use it all day long.

At home I use convertword2pdf.com/.

Simple upload the file and then download the PDF version. It's free and you'll never be without it so long as you have internet access :cool:

The site above will convert many documents, see here.

Good luck.

Poeli 17th Jan 2010 07:06

With word 2007 you can also save as PDF, directly, I've done it a lot of times with my CV

Trolle 17th Jan 2010 10:18

When I don't have Acrobat Pro handy I use this site:
PDF Converter - Convert to PDF Online Free

Takes a few minutes after you upload the .DOCX file and then they'll email it back to you as a PDF.

ZH875 17th Jan 2010 10:43


Originally Posted by Capetonian (Post 5448262)
Another advantage of .pdf files is that they cannot (easily) be modified, which is why lawyers and accountants use them.


Oh yes they can, very easily.

Capetonian 17th Jan 2010 11:03

I think my lawyer would be concerned to hear this. When I asked him why he always sends letters etc as .pdf's he said that it was so they can't be modifed and then sent on, thus misrepresenting what was in the original. I've also noticed that accountants and IFA's often do the same.

Unlike me, he's quite a high-tech sort of person (I'mn a Luddite) so seriously, just how easy is it to modify/overwrite a .pdf?


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