# CV Bible — Ahmet Kerem Özbay (Logistics / Warehouse Ops) Goal: produce **1-page, ATS-safe** CVs that (a) match warehouse/logistics job ads, and (b) present a credible “why you” story despite heavy competition and increasing automation. This bible is intentionally opinionated and designed for repeatable iteration. ## 1) Positioning (pick your lane) You will maintain **two** CV variants: ### Variant A — Warehouse Ops (primary) Target roles (French equivalents in parentheses): - Warehouse worker / warehouse operative (opérateur logistique) - Order picker / order preparer (préparateur de commandes) - Receiving / shipping support (réception / expédition) - Inventory assistant (assistant inventaire) Core promise: “Reliable, accurate warehouse operator who protects quality, flow, and safety.” ### Variant B — Logistics Admin / Export Docs (adjacent) Target roles: - Logistics assistant (assistant logistique) - Export documentation assistant (assistant ADV export / assistant documentation) - Junior logistics coordinator (coordinateur logistique junior) Core promise: “Trade & logistics graduate who can execute documentation + Excel checks and support warehouse flow.” Rule: each CV must read like it was written for **one** type of job. ## 2) Format (non-negotiables) - **Length:** 1 page. - **Layout:** single column; no tables; no icons; no multi-column sidebars. - **Font:** 10.5–11.5pt body; 12–14pt name. - **Headings:** simple ATS headings: `Summary`, `Experience`, `Education`, `Skills`, `Languages`, `Certifications`. - **File:** PDF export, filename: `Ahmet-Kerem-Ozbay_CV_WarehouseOps_EN.pdf` (or `_LogisticsAdmin_`). - **Dates:** `MMM YYYY – MMM YYYY` (or `YYYY – YYYY`), consistent. - **Location:** City, Country. Add `Willing to relocate: France/EU` if true. ## 3) Header block (what must be visible in 2 seconds) Mandatory: - Name - Target role (one line) - City/Country (and current base if useful) - Phone, email - LinkedIn URL (real link, not just the word “LinkedIn”) Optional (use sparingly): - “Willing to relocate” - “Available for shifts/weekends” Work authorization note (controversial): - Maintain two variants: - **France-filtering** CV: add one neutral line: `Work authorization: requires employer-sponsored work permit (France).` - **General/Europe** CV: omit; disclose in outreach + first call. ## 4) Summary / objective (3–4 lines max) Formula: - Who you are (role + background) - What you can do (3–5 keywords) - Proof hint (one credibility marker: English C1 / degree / warehouse experience) - What you want (target role + location flexibility) Good (Warehouse Ops): “Warehouse operator with hands-on picking/packing/receiving experience and a Logistics & International Trade degree. Strong scan discipline, stock checks, labeling/packing accuracy, and 5S mindset. English C1, advanced Excel, reliable under dispatch deadlines. Open to shift work and relocation within France/EU.” Avoid: - Over-claiming (“expert”, “highly experienced”) at junior level. - Generic adjectives without proof (“dynamic”, “hardworking”) unless tied to evidence. ## 5) Experience bullets (the main differentiator) Each role should have 3–5 bullets, max. Bullet formula (choose 1–2 per bullet): - **Action verb** + **task** + **tool/system** + **quality/safety control** + **result/volume** Examples (warehouse): - “Picked and packed mixed-SKU orders using barcode checks; verified quantities and labels to prevent mis-picks.” - “Received inbound goods, labeled and shelved stock by location; flagged discrepancies to supervisor.” - “Supported 5S and slot organization to improve pick-path clarity and reduce search time.” Metrics to add (only if true): - Order lines/day, parcels/day, pallets/day - Accuracy %, returns reduction - On-time dispatch %, peak-day volumes - Inventory counts/cycle counts completed - Safety: “0 incidents” only if accurate If you don’t know metrics: - Use conservative ranges you can defend in interview. - If you can’t defend it, don’t write it. ## 6) Skills section (grouped, keyword-rich, not fluffy) Recommended grouping for Variant A: - **Warehouse ops:** picking, packing, receiving, put-away, labeling, pallet building, loading/unloading, returns - **Quality & safety:** barcode verification, SOP compliance, 5S, basic QC checks - **Inventory:** stock control, cycle counts (if true), discrepancy reporting - **Tools:** RF scanner/barcode scanning, Excel (filters, pivot tables), Word, PowerPoint Recommended grouping for Variant B: - **Trade & documentation:** Incoterms 2020; commercial invoice; proforma; packing list; CMR; bill of lading; COO; delivery notes - **Operations support:** order tracking, shipment follow-up, exception handling - **Tools:** Excel (pivot tables, lookups), email, basic reporting ## 7) Education (make it unambiguous) Format: - Degree name (English + original if useful) - University, City, Country - Graduation month/year Example: `B.A. International Trade & Logistics — Cumhuriyet University, Sivas, Turkey (Jul 2025)` ## 8) Languages Keep it factual: - English (C1) - French (A1 / learning) if true - German (A1) If applying in France, adding even basic French helps. Don’t exaggerate. ## 9) Certifications / licenses List only real items: - B driving license (important for delivery/hub roles) - UAV pilot license (only keep if space; not directly relevant) High-value future add (France warehouse): - CACES forklift certification (if obtained) ## 10) Customization checklist (per application) Before sending a CV: - Mirror **5–8 keywords** from the job ad (exact wording). - Reorder bullets so the most relevant appear first. - If the job is cold/frozen zones, mention ability to work in variable temperatures (if true). - If the role is customer-facing (AUTO1), elevate service experience + paperwork accuracy. - If the role is luxury (Hermès), elevate SOP discipline + quality control. ## 11) “Proof points” library (collect these once; reuse everywhere) Write down (for yourself) and keep consistent: - Typical daily volume (orders/lines/parcels) - Peak day volume - Types of goods handled (fragile? mixed SKUs? heavy items?) - Systems used (scanner/WMS), even if you don’t know the brand - Shift pattern worked (early/late/weekend) - A concrete “saved the day” story (error caught, urgent order, inventory mismatch resolved)