Your resume summary is a short paragraph in which you summarize your previous work experience, your skills and what you want for your next job. If you're transitioning from a job in food service to a different field, you might be wondering how to incorporate that work experience into your resume. So how do you include your job responsibilities in a resume to make it count? We've perfected an incredible recipe to make your server job description irresistible. Include the job title, name and location of the company and the dates you worked at the top of the description of each server position.
How do you make a serving job sound good on a resume?
Your resume summary is a short paragraph in which you summarize your previous work experience, your skills and what you want for your next job. If you're transitioning from a job in food service to a different field, you might be wondering how to incorporate that work experience into your resume.
Tori Cianciolo25/05/230 minutes read

Tori Cianciolo
Pop culture fan. Freelance web lover. Proud tv specialist. Music trailblazer. Unapologetic internet trailblazer. Typical sushi lover.
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What is a serving job?
Tori Cianciolo1 minute readThe server's responsibility is to serve diners before, during and after their meals, helping them to place, receive and pay for their orders. They also ensure timely delivery of food and beverages by checking their tables periodically throughout the service time.
Is serving one of the most stressful jobs?
Tori Cianciolo2 minutes readHowever, a new study has found that being a waiter or waitress can be even more stressful than we thought, even more so than being a neurosurgeon (or any type of doctor) or stockbroker, not to mention a teacher, a scientist, an architect, a janitor, a miner or a manual worker. Being a waiter may seem like a good job, but it's actually a very stressful role.
Will service jobs be lost to low-wage countries?
Tori Cianciolo8 minutes readProtectionism certainly saves jobs in a specific industry that is being protected, but, for two reasons, it costs jobs in other unprotected industries. First, if consumers pay higher prices to the protected industry, they inevitably have less money to spend on products from other industries, so jobs are lost in those other industries.
Is serving people a real job?
Tori Cianciolo5 minutes readAlthough not everyone considers the service to be a legitimate profession, the money that can be earned is very real. When Saeed Tokhi's father saw him cleaning up after a party the family had organized, he later told Saeed, “It made me cry.”.