Monday, May 18, 2020
12 Resume Phrases That Need to Go
12 Resume Phrases That Need to Go Resumes can seem like a constantly-changing beast. Sometimes, you go several years without writing a resume. When you need one again, you need to dust your resume off and freshen it up, again! Youll likely find the conventions for whatâs acceptable format-wise has changed. (By the way, itâs always worth taking the time to update your resume even when you arenât looking for a job but I digress). Itâs hard to keep up. Buzzwords roll in, become stale and then meaningless. However, the fundamentals of a great resume havenât changed in years: they need to tell a story. They need to be full of accomplishments; quantifiable ones. What they shouldnât be is boring, boilerplate or full of outdated terminology. With resumes often receiving only about 6 seconds of scrutiny by recruiters and managers, you canât afford to have useless jargon in there. You definitely cant afford terminology that sends the opposite message to what youâre going for. Weve put together a list (from a 30-year recruitment expert) of terms that still show up all the time on resumes that simply need to go. I mean the terms that should be wipe-your-hands, never-see-them-again gone, but still manage to worm their way onto live resumes coming into my recruitment practice every day. Phrases that are meaningless These words have become meaningless by their repetition. The words that recruiters and hiring managers just glance past that are taking up your precious resume real estate. âHighly motivatedâ Everyone is âhighly motivatedâ on a resume, yet anyone whoâs held down a job knows that not everyone is highly motivated. Something doesnât add up â" and itâs the fact that this buzzword doesnât actually describe anything. âDynamic self-starterâ See above. âAbility to accomplish objectivesâ Show your objectives and accomplishments rather than describing your ability to complete them. âThought leaderâ A list of publications, speaking engagements, board memberships or other extra-curriculars speaks louder than this buzzword. âTimely fashionâ This phrase just sounds old-timely. âResults-drivenâ Again, show the results and let them speak for themselves. âEffective communicatorâ Your resume itself is a document attesting to your communications skills, so using this word is like ending an essay with the phrase âthis is a very good essay.â Phrases that send the opposite message to what youâre trying to convey âResponsible forâ or âDuties includeâ This is the death-knell of resume effectiveness. When one of our candidates sends across a resume with this kind of language, we almost always help them extensively revise. The reason? You want to send the message that youâre able to handle a multitude of responsibilities, but this kind of phrasing makes it sound like youâre filling a seat rather than contributing in a meaningful way. âVisionaryâ You want to seem as though you take a creative, personal approach to your job, which is great, but this actually ends up sounding a bit arrogant. No one can credibly call themselves a visionary. âSeasoned professionalâ Youâre trying to send the message that youâve been around the block and dealt with a variety of situations, but it tends to make you sound a bit outdated. It also makes you sound like a Sunday roast. âAble to meet deadlinesâ You want to send a message that you have great time management skills and can work under pressure, but this phrasing actually sends the message that youâre sort of happy with the status quo. Youâre âableâ to meet deadlines, rather than going above and beyond. Bonus: Other outdated resume practices Using an email with an old-school domain like AOL or Hotmail. This is a surprising one to a lot of people, but it sends the message that youâre not up to date with technology. Saying âreferences available upon request.â This can be assumed. Including your date of birth and/or marital status. Including a list of skills, or a profile summary at the beginning of a resume. These are recently out the door, but theyâre out of date nevertheless. We totally get that resumes are hard, and you have to fill them with something. Theyâre even harder without being able to use the common terminology that we often see. But trust us that working without these kinds of words is a worthy exercise. And stay tuned for our next article where weâll dive into how to use action words, metrics and accomplishments to show your excellence as a candidate, rather than relying on buzzwords. About the author: Bronwen Hann is President and Senior Partner of Argentus.com, a boutique recruitment firm that specializes in recruitment for Supply Chain Management and its related functions including Procurement, Logistics, Operations and Planning.
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