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![]() You are a person that still needs a resume to get a job in today’s world of networking and making contacts. We don’t believe that you’re fresh out of university, or high school, but maybe you are looking to switch positions, from one industry to another. Anyway, a resume is essential as a presentation of your work and yourself and you need it to be well written. Some people would hire a person to do it for them and present them as they are, but only say it better. Even so, if you are writing your own resume, or you’re having it written for you- you must make sure that these words don’t appear. 10. CapableEvery employer who is looking at your resume will say the same thing: "Of course you’d call yourself capable. You wouldn’t say that you are incapable of performing a task”. This irritates them. Why? Because you don’t know for sure that you are, and because you can’t be certain whether you would be capable of performing the work that you are applying to, since all you have to go by is a simple job description. There is no alternative word that you could use, but efficient is close enough. It implies that you get the job done. Avoid describing yourself as "effective”. 9. ScalableThis is one of my favorites. Somewhere, in a resume, in an article, in a mere conversation someone used scalable and now everyone is using it as an adjective that goes with everything. It is difficult to define, and therefore it is hard to understand its meaning in a certain phrase. There is one thing you must avoid, and that is to make your resume vague. If your future employer is not sure what you meant by it, they won’t try to find out. Every word has a synonym, use it. 8. Hard-WorkingHard-working is good. Employers like hard-workers. Do you know what they like better? An employee that performs. Sometimes you don’t have to be a hard-worker to get the job done, especially if you’re in an industry where other things are more valuable like creativity (advertising), or focus (finance). Try and find a synonym that would still imply that you are a hard-worker but in a way that counts. Or avoid the adjective. 7. ThruWe are not thinking that you’d put "thru” in your resume necessarily. But this represents all the words in the text that may be misspelled, the dates that may not be correct or something else that is wrong. We are human, it is normal that we make mistakes, but that is no excuse. Use an online spell checker to see if you’ve missed a letter, double check your data (including your contact data- e-mail, phone number etc.) and after that, check for grammar and style errors. There and their, affective and effective, your and you’re may put off your potential employer and cross your name of the list. 6. Problem-solverThis word is not good because there is a certain dose of negativity in it. It implies that there will be problems and that you will be involved in them (as a problem solver of course). That is hard to predict and it may result in a tough question on your interview, such as : "Tell us about a specific problem that occurred and describe how you dealt with it”. Good luck getting out of that one. 5. CreativeBeing creative is a good quality, and this is actually a good word to have in your resume, but you must avoid describing yourself as creative. Try something like "worked alongside creative people”, "engaged in creative tasks”, etc. This implies that creativity and you are linked in some way and therefore you must be creative otherwise that wouldn’t be the case. 4. InnovativeCommon place words like innovative are often used on resumes. And by everyone. They have lost their strength and now make potential employers roll their eyes. Words such as: innovative, team player and results-oriented. There are better ways to say all this. Team player: Having worked in a team of skillful people. Innovative e.g.: Giving birth to new strategies. Results-oriented: Making sure that the goals were met, etc. Sometimes it is just best to describe yourself with phrases rather than words. 3. "Communication skills”What
are communication skills? Being able to speak? Being able to speak
well? Who judges that? How do you know that you have excellent
communication skills? 2. MotivatedThis is ok if you say what motivates you-e.g. "Internally motivated” or "Learning and acquiring new skills motivates me”. "Motivated” alone is vague, and it makes your potential employer wonder why is it important to you to emphasize that you’re motivated? You may get yet another difficult question. 1. SkillfulReally? You have skills? Wow, I didn’t notice that by reading your resume. All humor aside, you now see how redundant this word is, and how it can be interpreted. Instead of saying skillful, try emphasizing the skills that are clearly seen in your resume. Now that you’ve read this article, go through your resume and see if you’ve made the same mistakes as millions of people sending them out . Remove them and try searching for a way to include those qualities but in a different way. After all, you’re a skillful, creative and a capable person, aren’t you? | |
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