Tips:
- Be as concise as possible while still relaying the important bits: "Intubated companion species pre-operatively" or "Performed daily health assessments". My mom recruited for a huge government agency for a while and she always said your resume should be ONE page only, which I have stuck to in past job applications, including for veterinary work.
- Similarly, you do not need to include every single accomplishment from your life. A CV is different in that way where people do list a ton of different things, but a resume is more tailored. Depending on how much you have to talk about veterinary-wise, you can most likely leave out your job as an ice cream saleswoman that one summer in college or your award for Most Likely to Succeed in high school.
- Make a decent cover letter. I know these are tough and they will probably all read about the same, but try to highlight your most applicable skills and why you want to work at whatever place you're applying to.
- Have someone look over your resume/cover letter before submitting! It can be helpful with flow and to make sure it isn't too jumbled.
I'm happy to send mine along as well although looks like you already have some offers. Also happy to proof-read if you'd like