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Do KSAs Really Matter?

By Jason Kay

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

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Jason Kay is the lead writer for KSADoctor.com, a leading KSA writing service. KSADoctor.com also provides ksa samples and other federal job application assistance.

It depends if you want the job or not! In today's economic environment, you cannot afford to be dispassionate about the first and last impression you make with a prospective client--including the federal government.  

Think of your resume and the accompanying supplemental document, often referenced as a KSA form, as your first introduction to a recruiter that serves as a formal gatekeeper in either allowing or restricting you to interview for a job you may want within the Federal Government. You want to make it as easy possible for that person to say "Yes!"

The KSA document (Knowledge, Skills and Abilities) is one of the most important parts of the Federal job application process. To understand the process, it is important to understand a bit of its history.

The Federal Government, like any mammoth organization and/or large system, had a sporadic process to review, select and interview potential candidates to fill posted job vacancies.

The government wanted to improve the efficiency and turn-around time of employees responsible for filling job vacancies. It designed and implemented a streamlined, equitable applicant review process that permitted teams to quickly and effectively select, compare, measure, and rank qualified candidates competing for the same position. Considerations included comparison of applicants against the unique requirements of the posted job, applicant competencies, background, experience, expertise, and education.

The KSA process was born.

Seven Hints to Creating a KSA that Produces a Wow!

First, think of the KSA document as if it were an informal interview on paper.

1. Assure that you make a positive first impression by incorporating correct spelling, grammar, sentence structure in well thought out sentences that are in direct response to specific questions asked on the form.

Your response should be thorough, but concise. The information should be to the point, but with enough meaningful data to create a "wow".

2. In answering questions, begin writing your sentences by using action words such as designed, implemented, created, addressed, assessed, etc. to demonstrate taking personal responsibility for producing a specific action and/or outcome related to the question asked.

3. Link specific favorable outcomes to as many statements as possible to demonstrate actual value-added impact. Notice the difference between the two examples below:

4. In many Federal job postings, you will find qualification specifications listed as critical and others listed as desirable. Focus on providing data that directly addresses the critical qualifications first and the desirable attributes second.

5. The posting may actually highlight the designated percentage of importance for each qualification listed. Make sure to prioritize and target the designated qualifications with your statements. In other words, if the posting specifies 6-Sigma expertise as being 60%, engineering 25% and information technology 15%, don't focus largely on information technology. 

6. Don't submit yet! Whether or not the KSA is submitted via on-line or hard copy, take a break for at least thirty minutes. Walk away from the form. Have a cup of coffee or tea. Watch a cartoon. Whatever you need to do to get your mind off the KSA section. Note: If the form is to be completed and submitted on-line, proactively assure there is no time-out period in which the server will automatically disconnect and or you have a chance of losing data. Print a sample copy of possible.

7. After thirty minutes, return and review the form. You will likely find weak points, spelling errors; sentences that you thought made sense and now wonder what you were thinking! Make the needed changes and follow directions to submit. Be sure to make an extra copy to review prior to your interview!

Get more information on KSA writing, federal resumes, and more at KSADoctor.com.

© 2010 KSADoctor.com. All rights reserved. This article may not be reproduced without express written consent from KSADoctor.com.

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Readers' Comments

  • I say get rid of them if the government agencies don't care how or where the responses derived from. If one can pay someone else to write their KSA's what's the point. KSA's provide the foundation for an interview. KSA responses gives the employer some insight as to how you would respond in diffe...
    Posted: July 22, 2009 11:44 AM
  • KSAs should be done away with. The questions can be covered in a in person interview. The resume should be the guiding factor on making the cert list. 3 things that should be changed: 1 NO MORE KSAS, most persons selected from KSAs can ONLY write and are not good candidates for the position. ...
    Posted: July 21, 2009 7:50 PM
  • Writing KSA's are one of the most frustrating tasks I do in my job. You must use the exact buzz word to get the points. You only know the buzz word if you have ranked a similar position. You can never tell anyone exactly what they are looking for and your suppose to forget it as soon as you turn in ...
    Posted: July 21, 2009 8:13 AM

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