The Data Science Resume That Got Me My FAANG Software Engineer Offer
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The Data Science Resume That Got Me My FAANG Job Offer as a Software Engineer | Subscribe to my channel: / @datasciencegraduate432 | 2x Free Stocks (Deposit $100): https://act.webull.com/promotion/join... | Up to $250 for crypto bonus: https://blockfi.com/?ref=7518b781 • Follow me on all social media platforms for data science, data analytics, machine learning, AI, and college and career advice content! • Instagram: / datasciencegraduate • TikTok: / datasciencegraduate • Twitter: / datagraduate • Thanks for watching! Please like, subscribe and hit the bell, and comment about future video ideas and suggestions! • #DataScience #Resume #FAANG • At the top of my resume is my header. I censored the specific info for privacy and anonymity while still showing the general format. The header includes my name in the center and bolded with a larger font size to make it easier to read and the first thing that recruiters see in my resume. • After that, I list my location, phone number, and email since at the time, I thought it was important info to include since applications ask for this info. Below that, I have links to my LinkedIn profile, personal website, and GitHub profile to provide recruiters an easy way to find my professional profiles and code. • Below my header, I have my education section. One thing to note is that I separate my sections with section titles with a colon at the end, followed by a line below the section title. Below that, I list my school, which is UC San Diego, followed by my GPA. From the recruiters I spoke to, they generally recommend to list your GPA on your resume if it’s 3.0 or higher, assuming it’s on a 4.0 scale. • Here, I list my overall GPA, but if your overall GPA isn’t higher than 3.0, you could also list your major GPA and just list it on your resume as major GPA. After that, I listed my graduation month and year. Below that, I listed my degree, which is a B.S. in Data Science, followed by the quarters in which I was awarded Provost Honors. I added this Provost Honors part to fill in the whitespace with relevant extra info. • After that, I listed the location of UCSD, which is in La Jolla, and the list of relevant courses that connect to the role I’m applying for. Since I was applying for a Software Engineer role, I listed my data structures, algorithms, and software engineering courses first. Then, I listed my data science courses, such as recommender systems, machine learning, and scalable analytics, to demonstrate the coursework taught as part of my degree program. • Now I made a separate video going over my entire data science degree at UCSD. I put a link to that video down below in the description, if you’re interested to check it out. • So the next section I have listed is my skills section. I divided my skills into two categories: programming languages and development tools. • I listed my skills from most proficient to least proficient to make it easier for recruiters to identify my key skills. So with that in mind, I listed my programming languages as follows: Python for data science; Java from my computer science courses; JavaScript, HTML, and CSS for front-end development; SQL for databases; C and C++ from my data structures courses; R for statistics; and Bash and ARM Assembly for machine code. • For development tools, I listed Git for version control; Jupyter for data science work; Hive, PySpark, and Dask for scalable data science work; D3 and Tableau for data visualization; Node.js and Firebase for app development and a scalable database; and UNIX and Linux. • After my skills section, I listed my experience section. Here, I listed my most recent internship experience at the time, which was a Software Engineer Internship at American Express. So, I bolded the name of the company and put my role below that. On the right, I have the date range of my internship and location. Then, I have 3 bullet points explaining my work and its impact. • I made sure to start each bullet point with an action verb in the past tense to explain that my work here was in the past. I also made my first bullet point have a metric of my work replacing a 1 million dollar vendor relationship to quantify the impact of my work, making my work and its impact easier to understand to recruiters. I also have the skills listed in my second bullet point to show technical-focused people and engineers what my core skills were for my work. • Disclaimer: Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies which I will earn an affiliate commission or referral bonus. I am part of an affiliate network and receive compensation for sending traffic to partner sites. The content in this video is accurate as of the posting date. Some of the offers mentioned may no longer be available.
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