first person, you *are* speaking directly to the person reading.
second paragraph feels more energetic and dynamic, go with first person on that
pages... hm... I'm an Engineer and I've hired lots of Engineers. I am NOT hiring one who can get their whole work experience on one page. and probably not on two pages either. my short resume is 4 pages, I've got a 6 page version... but I've been an independent contractor for 20 years and almost 15 years of experience before that, so Ive worked a lot of places.
I've never tossed a resume out of the stack because it was long. but if I can't find the info I need.... well that's another thing. the problem with long resumes is because I don't have TIME to read all that JUST to find out if you have what I need.
my front page is a well organized and easy to read bullet list of skills, experience, tools, assets, strengths... in a moment they can see if:
1) I've got the particular experience they need
2) I've got the particular tools they need
3) that I've got broad and deep experience in several industries
4) that I'm organized
what I *hate* in a resume is having to dig and read every darn paragraph to find out if they've got the skills I need... and I think the resume reflects not just the individual's work history, but their way of organizing information, and how they approach communication.
so page one is the book jacket blurb... it's got to tell me there's a reason to look at page two. page one hooks me in, page two is deeper detail, the rest of the story. when written that way, I don't care how long the resume is, because I know by the end of page one if I'm interested in reading the rest. and if I get as far as page two, it's because I WANT to be there, not because I can't find out what I need to know and have to keep slogging.
consider this:
what is the purpose of *your* resume?
is it to show you can tell people all the typical things, and organize it in the typical manner?
or is it to show you have the knowledge, experience and communication skills to be the outstanding, brilliant, go-getting, batting-way-over-average sales person they need?
your resume is not just a compendium of your history, it's a microcosm of your actual abilities and talents, demonstrated right there on the page. Is you *showing* your skills, not inventorying your history.
If I were hiring a sales guy, at the end of reading your resume I want to be sold that youre the right one. I want to think wow, THIS is the guy we need! I'm excited about meeting him, I sure hope he hasn't already accepted another offer. I dont want my biggest most passionate thought to be, This guy seems to have the right background.
So
make me believe You Are The One.
I know if youve been successful in sales in the past that you know sales isnt about boasting, or about pushing, its about identifying what the buyer needs, REALLY needs, and giving them the confidence that youre the one who can deliver it.
Anyway, thats the way I write my resume. My layout is unconventional, clean, well organized. But whats most important is they have a clear idea of the person and the engineer that I am, and a strong feeling that I can help resolve their pain, do the job, take weight off their shoulders.
It IS unconventional. But then, I want them to pick me out of the stack, I want to stand out from all the people who have the same conventional cookie-cutter resumes.
FWIW, as a contractor, I interview a LOT. Most contracts last between 3 and 18 months. I cant remember the last time I sent in a resume and didnt get a call for an interview, so I know that the resume is working.
Just my thoughts...