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I would like to write a CV and on my CV website I have a field called "Specialties in Your Industries of Expertise" and examples: "Examples: Union negotiation, purchasing, government liaison, branding and identity, server architecture"

In developer work I've learned a lot things and still learning. But I don't know what specialties I've learned are most important for my future employee. Should I mention anything from top to bottom or select general ones?

So my questions are:

  1. Should I write all my programming skills from top to bottom?
  2. Please write what programming skills are worth mentioning in CV
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closed as not programming related by Ólafur Waage, Mitch Wheat, Galwegian, Neil Butterworth, Rich B Mar 24 at 11:58

1 Answer

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Apart from the oxymoron of general specialties...

They are asking if you have any specialist knowledge or skills. Most jobs involve learning something specific to an industry, a programming language, a platform.

Ask yourself what you have learnt in your developer jobs which you wouldn't find in a textbook or on a CS course. Which markets? What have you learnt about?

Personally, I would list my academic numerics work, because that's specialised in terms of the academic market and the numerics field. I would list my finance work, and the particular markets it applied to.

The recruiter often wants buzzwords that a potential employer is hoping for. A logistics company would be looking for logistics, shipping, timetabling. Can you think of any buzzwords that applied to your previous work?

What other areas would your software have been applicable to? What common ground made that possible? Was it UI work, customer-facing, fractals, instrument calibration, telecomms switching?

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