Licenses/Certificates
Any
licenses you hold that are necessary or valuable in the
field you are seeking should be listed. Be selective, though. Only list
certificates and licenses which are relevant to the new position. Mentioning a
real estate license when you want to be a purchasing agent for a tool
manufacturer would not add to your qualifications and might cause the employer
to wonder whether your preferred career was selling real estate or purchasing.
LICENSES
First Class FCC Radio Telephone Operator (1984)
Commercial
Instrument Pilot rating (1983) 840 hours flight time
Private Pilot (1982)
(Electronics
technologist and sales rep who flies to see customers)
LICENSES
General Electrical
Administrator Certificate - California (1982)
Journeyman
Electrician License ‑ California, Nevada, Arizona (1981)
Commercial
Instrument Pilot’s License (1980)
(Electrician who
would like to do some flying for his employer)
LICENSES
FCC, 1981
(Broadcast
journalist who needs a Federal Communications Commission
license to operate on the air)
LICENSES
CPA - New York, New Jersey, California
LICENSES
Professional
Engineer, Mechanical Engineering - Colorado (1989)
CERTIFICATION
Standard Elementary
and Secondary, Idaho (Lifetime 1986)
(Teacher)
CERTIFICATE
Personal Coaching,
The Coaching Institute (1999)
CERTIFICATE
Human Resources
Management, Continuing Education, University of
Washington (1997)
Copyright 1985, 1990, 1995, 2002 by Tom Washington
Career Management Resources
1750 112th NE, Suite C-224
Bellevue, WA 98004
425/454-6982