USA TODAY US Edition

Microsoft, LinkedIn can help you do your résumé

New Resume Assistant tool is built into Word

- Edward C. Baig

Need help crafting your résumé? LinkedIn and Microsoft are teaming up on a Resume Assistant tool inside Microsoft Word that promises to help you tailor a résumé to your career path, or more specifical­ly, to one of the 11 million jobs posted on LinkedIn.

Microsoft bought the career and business-oriented social network in June 2016 for $26 billion, a play for LinkedIn’s profession­al users and their data. It’s slowly begun to knit its productivi­ty-focused software offerings with the job-networking site.

Resume Assistant will initially be made available at no extra charge to members of the Microsoft Office 365 Insider program starting Thursday before it rolls out more broadly to all Microsoft Office 365 subscriber­s.

The integratio­n between Microsoft and LinkedIn leverages artificial intelligen­ce in letting Resume Assistant surface the skills that portray the job seeker most favorably and to showcase how other profession­als in relevant fields described their own work experience­s. The informatio­n appears inside Word along the right rail.

“The common theme we kept hearing is people were staying in their jobs just to avoid updating their résumé,” says Bryan Goode, the general manager of Microsoft’s Office 365, who added that more than 80% of résumés are updated in Word. In fact, when you open a résumé in Word, the Resume Assistant will recognize the document as such and pop up.

You don’t have to have a profile on LinkedIn to take advantage of Resume Assistant, but if you so choose during the process, you can get more informatio­n on a job post through LinkedIn and apply for any positions of interest.

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