Sat, May 26, 2012, 9:36 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed

5 Overused Resume Phrases

When it comes to resumes, recruiters have seen it all. Some are clever and creative, and some contain outright blatant untruths. What hiring managers see most, however, is a parade of the same old tired words and phrases that don't tell them anything useful about the candidates. These words have become standard fare and have been recommended by just about every resume expert in the 1990s. Hiring needs have changed over the past two decades and companies are seeking more specialized experience and skills. Here are five resume phrases to avoid if you want yours to stand out in the crowd.

Team Leader
This phrase is meant to convey that the applicant has experience in managing employees. The phrase "team leader," however, does nothing to describe the nature of the relationship. For example, having the responsibility to hire, fire and otherwise manage human resources is a different skill than being responsible for receiving updates from a project team. Choose specific examples of human resource experience and outline exactly what you were in charge of. Tailor the examples chosen and the description to the requirements of the job posting.

Effective Communicator
What does this term really say about you? That you talk a lot? That you conserve your words? That you speak only when necessary? It is simply another vacant phrase that tells a potential employer nothing about your skills. What do you communicate and to whom? If you want to highlight the fact that you consult your staff and include them in the decision-making process, be specific in referencing this and provide clear examples of your communication style and why it was effective.

Co-ordinated
"Co-ordinated" is a word often used in resumes when you can't say "in charge of" or "responsible for." Its meaning is vague and unclear. What did you co-ordinate? What did it involve – developing a project plan, following a schedule or checking in with different teams? Use more specific verbs to show a recruiter the extent of your management experience.

Innovative Thinker
Companies and organizations don't hire thinkers. They hire experienced doers. If you believe that your thought processes have helped you to be successful in your career, outline the results of your thinking. Show how the plan and the actions were innovative and why. If it resulted in the company saving money, increasing productivity or other objective measures, show numerically how you have helped the company.

Proactively
"Proactively" is one of the most often used and most meaningless resume adverbs, and it's used in front of many equally meaningless verbs such as communicated, co-ordinated and organized. It simply means that you did something using initiative – a skill expected by all employers. It means you did your job. There is no need to highlight it on your resume. Employers are more interested in your previous accomplishments.

The Bottom Line
Human resource departments have to sift through hundreds, if not thousands, of resumes in a year. The vast majority will use some or all of the above catchphrases. Recruiters are accustomed to skipping over such words to hunt for the nuggets of what the applicant has accomplished in prior jobs. Focus your resume on what you have done, not how you have done it. Give relevant examples of past projects or tasks that highlight skills the new job will require. Align your resume wording to that of the job description to show that you understand what is required and that you have the experience necessary to excel. The easier you make it for a recruiter to hire you, the more likely you will be hired.


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28 comments

  • Wilks  •  Quincy, Massachusetts  •  4 months ago
    Wow, I've never seen any articles like this before. There must be enough books on this crap to fill a library.

    Know what gets you a job? Your connections. Period.
    • Joe 4 months ago
      No kidding, you can be a Ph.D. and clean toilets if you don't know the right people, or you can be a #$%$ with a grade school diploma and work on Wall Street. Who you know and not what you know.....period.
    • Diversified Image 4 months ago
      I have connections,unfortunately they're all loose.
  • Old Geezer  •  4 months ago
    What about Multi-tasker?
  • VladimirS  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
    If you compose resume only with catchphrases, the HR will skip them. As a result they will suffer with division on zero syndrome :).
  • Telling It Like It Is 200 ...  •  4 months ago
    The fact is that most companies do not take in resumes any more. They have their own specific form they have created that you must fill out. Yes, you can give them your resume and they will take it, but you will still have to fill out their form. All resumes are good for nowdays is for transferring information to these in-house forms that have taken their place. Employers got tired of reading self promoting claptrap long ago and don't really do it anymore
  • Adam Smith, Jr.  •  Boston, Massachusetts  •  4 months ago
    Sweet, I can still use "maximized holistic paradigm synergies to add value to the organization's Goodwill".
  • RobertM  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  4 months ago
    It's not what you know it's who you blow.
    • Joe 4 months ago
      helps if you are female, but increasingly males also can try the blow part
  • Tim  •  North Chicago, Illinois  •  4 months ago
    Not many people really give a #$%$ what's on a Resume anymore. Most of them submitted are never seen because there are too many to screen. Most HR people have minimum wage clerks pre-screening the resumes. The Content of resumes is being over-blown. I sent one through with my name marked Donald Duck, and I actually got a response. I think they should give those minimum wage clerks an increase
    • Old Geezer 4 months ago
      Did you get new ID for the interview?
  • k2peak  •  Edmonton, Canada  •  4 months ago
    Extremely shallow article.
  • Joe  •  4 months ago
    #1 thing a company cares about instead of your POS diploma.........is...... how much money can you make for the company, and at what minimum rate of pay can they get you to do this. That is all that they care about. Benefits and all the other crap is for losers. Money talks and #$%$ walks. Profit is the name of the game.
  • Ed  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  4 months ago
    I picked the low hanging fruit while avoiding being the long pole in the tent. I used a paridigm shift in actualizing the footprint rationalization. I outsouced real good.
    Am I hired?
  • JHOWA  •  Fredericksburg, Virginia  •  4 months ago
    heres one....I need a job
  • Tony N  •  Pleasanton, California  •  4 months ago
    Multi tasker: drinking coffee,surfing the internet, texting, on the phone with the girlfriend, ordering a pizza, all at my desk.
  • Joey Biden  •  Northbrook, Illinois  •  4 months ago
    more useless "self help" nonsense.
  • texas  •  West Salem, Wisconsin  •  4 months ago
    aritcle says what? ZIP
  • glenelg  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  4 months ago
    This is good to know. I don't want to work again, but I want tocollect unemployment. To do that, I must apply for work weekly and be able to proove it. Now I know how to write a resume that will ensure that I do not get hired yet will make it look like I am seriously trying to get a job. Sweet!!!
  • Scott  •  4 months ago
    Stupid article. These are meaningful terms and quite appropriate when effectively combined with specific examples/metrics.
  • billiam  •  4 months ago
    Yep, this senseless article has definitely received earned the responses it has received.
  • Living on an island  •  Columbus, Ohio  •  4 months ago
    If you are applying for a financial writing job never use the phrase, I wrote for Yahoo Finance. That catch phrase is meaningless. List examples of meaningful articles that were of use to the readers and actually helped them to make more money.
  • Tony N  •  Pleasanton, California  •  4 months ago
    references upon request
  • TheOpinionatedBoomer  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
    I am so tired of seeing all these articles on how to strengthen a resume. Realistically, things such as the schools you attended, particular experience for the position you are applying for, companies you have worked for, (have they been leaders in their field), length of employment at previous jobs, typos, how close you are to the office, and how your resume looks, to name a few. One other thing that I'm sure none of these articles mentions -- luck!
 
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