Developing Your Ministry Resume
Your ministry resume has one purpose: to get you invited to an interview. In this session, we will discuss how to format your resume, the required content for your resume, and the purpose and execution of an effective cover letter.
Key Takeaways
After you watch the video above, read through these key takeaways that will help guide and reinforce the main points you just viewed…
The ONLY purpose of your resume is to secure a job interview. To start the conversation. That is all.
Anything that you include on your resume that does not help you in scheduling your first interview with a church is just... well... wasted space.
Everybody has an opinion on what your resume should look like. This is art AND science.
It’s ok.
There is room for deviations.
The important thing is that you ‘do the work’ that most people don’t take the time to do.
Remember this: (and it's really simple!)
You have six seconds to make an impression with your resume.
Use your six seconds wisely.
OK... there is good news and bad news: the competition is fierce and not so fierce.
Bad news first: churches get tons of resumes. Your resume will be one of (maybe) hundreds a church may receive for its role opening.
The good news: Only about 3% or so of resumes that churches receive are actually good potential fits for the role. Many of the rest are people that are playing the numbers game... sending their resume out to as many churches as possible.
NOTE: You will be tempted to do this as well. Flee from that temptation. It will only frustrate you in the end.
There are some things you can’t change right now (and that’s ok):
- Age (remember the +15 calculation and the rule of 10 that we mention in the video)
- Gender
- Education/Experience
- Job History
- Family status
General rule of thumb: never send the same resume twice. Each resume should have at least some kind of customization.
- LENGTH - No more than two pages
- ORDER - Chronological (most recent at top of each section)
- LAYOUT - Slight graphical with a touch of color (checkout Canva.com for ideas)
- FONTS - No more than two fonts (must be tasteful/professional)
- PERSONALIZATION - Customize for specific openings whenever possible
- FORMAT - PDF (Always) - Name with your name & church name
- PICTURE - Include a picture of you, possibly your family, usually
- ACCURACY - Spell-check your entire resume (twice!)
- EDITING - Remove anything that will not help you get the interview
- ORGANIZATION - Use bullet points (no more than five per section)
- CONTACT INFORMATION - Phone number, professional email address, social media links, video work sample (whenever possible)
- MINISTRY OBJECTIVE - 2-3 Sentences maximum (I want to serve in a church that...”)
- EMPLOYMENT/EXPERIENCE - Chronological (include locations), last ten years is usually sufficient; make your experience relate to the role you’re applying for
- EDUCATION - Be honest and transparent; if the degree is unfinished, say so
- REFERENCES - Leave them off... it’s too early.
Additional Resources
We’ve assembled some great supplemental learning tools that will help you in your search for a healthy, long-term fit for your staff team. All of these exclusive Chemistry Staffing resources are available for free download for you and your search team.
After looking at literally thousands of church resumes over the years, Chemistry Staffing Co-Founder Todd Rhoades shares his insight and five key tips that will help you pass the six-second church resume test with flying colors!
Should you put a picture on your resume or is that considered unprofessional? And if you DO put a picture on your resume, should it be of just you or of you and your family?
The length of your resume communicates. Chemistry Staffing Co-Founder Todd Rhoades shares how long he thinks your resume should be, along with five key reasons.
Your Presenters
Todd Rhoades
Matt Steen
Need Additional Help With Your Search?
Check out these additional resources from our partners at ChurchResumes.com
Our video critique will take a look at your current resume and give specific recommendations to make drastic improvements. We’ll critique your resume based on our 20 resume benchmarks:
Ministry Stability | Ministry Experience | Current Employment | Employment Consistency | Education Level | Ministry Sustainability | Employment Timeline | Stage of Life | Family Dynamics | Online Presence | Picture Quality | Humbleness Quotient | Resume Presentation | Cover Letter | Video/Work Sample | Grammar and Spelling | Font Treatment | Contact Effectiveness | Resume File Format
We’ll go over your Resume Self-Assessment step-by-step in our one-hour call together. We’ll discuss each of our 20 resume benchmarks along with specific recommendations to make your resume better. After you make the suggested edits to your resume, we’ll provided video feedback with any follow-up items
Should I Say or Go? | Rediscovering/Clarifying Your Calling | Determining Your Best Fit | Resume Advice | Interview Preparation | Salary Negotiation
On-Site Visit Preparation | Family Health and Relationships | Literally Anything Transition-Related!