We are looking for an Indian / Nepali couples who can work for a family in Dubai. Husband should be a driver and wife should know cooking and must take care of employer’s house. Employer would provide visa and accommodation for both of them.
Driver
• Safely and timely drive the employer to work and back
• Familiar with the speed limits of different driving zone
• Knowledge of routs across UAE.
• Experience in driving luxury cars
• Neat and smart appearance.
• Able to read and write in English.
Home cook or Domestic helper
• Female with previous experience.
• Able to cook Indian and Pakistani dishes
• Knowledge of cleaning
• Reliable and trustworthy.
• Respectful and well mannered.
How to use strong action verbs on your resume
To effectively use resume power verbs, focus first on filling out your experience section with specific, quantified examples of your accomplishments. Then, use a compelling verb to enhance your bullet points.
Here’s a sample bullet point where the candidate improperly used resume action verbs:
Don't
“Went to all weekly company meetings to share department news.”
This example starts with a weak verb. “Went” doesn’t convey any positive information. This verb just indicates you did what was expected of you.
Hiring managers will be impressed if you show your proactiveness and back it up with quantifiable evidence.
Here’s the same example enhanced with resume action words:
Do
“Spearheaded weekly company meetings by communicating departmental growth and productivity.”
The applicant opens with a much more targeted action verb. Unlike “went to,” “spearheaded” is decisive and suggests the candidate has leadership abilities, organizational skills, and a knack for planning.
The applicant also includes the strong verb “communicating,” which is among the most common resume keywords recognized by corporate applicant tracking systems (ATS). By using action verbs, your resume is more likely to bypass the ATS and land in the hiring manager’s inbox.
Finally, the candidate ends their bullet point by stating explicitly what they communicated: “departmental growth and productivity.”