Resume Help... The Objective
The Resume
Objective - It's Not About You
© David Alan Carter
All Rights
Reserved
Here’s what not to say in your resume objective:
"Seeking a position with advancement opportunities to senior
management." If this happens to be the objective on your
current resume, save some prospective employer the trouble and
circular file that puppy yourself. Do I sound harsh? With all due respect, it’s a
harsh business world out there and getting harsher by the
day. When your resume hits the desk of a hiring official,
you’ve got seven seconds to make a good first impression.
And since your objective is likely to be the first thing
read, your fortunes are riding on a mere handful of words.
Here’s help with how to buy yourself another seven
seconds, and another seven beyond that. In other words,
here’s what you need to know to write a resume objective
that will keep the prospective employer reading.
It’s About The Hiring
Official
That’s right, contrary to conventional thinking, the
objective is not about you. It’s not about your wants or your
needs or your corporate lifestyle demands. Believe it or not,
it’s about the hiring official. As per that harsh world, he (or
she) is under pressure to fill a job opening not just with a
warm body, but with an individual whose hiring won’t come back
to haunt him. Ideally, he wants to find a candidate who’ll make
him look good to his superiors.
Because your resume objective is the first thing he’ll
read, he’ll be using that opportunity to quickly size you up.
Are you a professional, or a goof off? Have you done your
homework, or did you skip that prep? Do you have a defined and
realistic goal, or will any old work for any old paycheck do?
Do you give a damn about the company, or have you just got your
hand out? You’d be surprised how much one can tell from a
resume’s objective.
First Things First - Do Your
Homework
Start by researching your field. Even if you’re making a
lateral move, brush up on the economies that are driving this
field, the technologies that are changing it, and the
qualifications that are most in demand.
Research your prospective employer. Acme Manufacturing, with
it’s generic products and cardboard cutout employees is gone
like Mayberry--if it ever existed in the first place. In its
stead are highly competitive niche players that have their own
peculiar structures and workforce demands. Identify the company
(or companies) you want to
work for, then research and identify the workplace
environment and business philosophies that drive that
company. Start your research with the company’s web presence.
Glean additional insight from archived news articles, Dun and
Bradstreet (check your library) and analysts’ reports (if the
company’s stock is publicly traded).
Finally, research the position you want. Much of detail of
the job will remain elusive until the face-to-face interview,
but any nuggets of facts you can uncover ahead of that will
help you in targeting your effective resume. Otherwise, you may
never make it to the face-to-face.
Bringing It All
Together
By doing your homework on your prospective field, specific
company and target position, then choosing
the Chronological
Resume Format, you’re now ready to begin work on that
resume objective. Knowing that it’s not about you–it’s about
the hiring official–put your research into words. Instead of
"Seeking a position with advancement opportunities to
senior management," which is self-serving and all about
"me," your resume objective is now going to focus on the
needs of that hiring official. Something like the following:
"Entry-level position in Finance which could fully
utilize a technical expertise in database design and strong
drive to maximize corporate profitability in a competitive
global marketplace."
And bingo, in a single sentence you’ve drawn a
straight line between a key ingredient of the job position
and your skill set, acknowledged the company’s bid to go
global, and signaled your understanding that profits are
key to everybody keeping their job–including (and most
importantly) the person reading your resume.
If resumes were nothing beyond objectives, you’d have won
the job right then and there. You’ve shown yourself to be
professional, focused, on top of it, and dedicated to what
matters. But of course, there’s more to the hiring process than
the scan of a single objective. But for now, the important
thing is that you’ve bought yourself another seven
seconds in the screening process. And the hiring official keeps
reading.
Where we go from
here: The next page over, you'll find out how
to craft a resume that avoids other pitfalls of the screening
process. We call it our Top 10 Checklist for
a Good Resume. And because this resume help
website is a work in progress, we're currently
composing chapters on how to write an effective summary or
profile section, as well as work history and education
sections of the resume. You're invited to bookmark this site
and check back soon.
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At some
point...
in the resume
writing
process,
you're going to
be asking
yourself,
"Should I
have a
professional
write my
resume?"
The answer
may be yes...
if your
resume is going
to be fighting
for attention
in an extremely
competitive
field, or if
your work
history or job
qualifications
are difficult
for you to
express in a
promotion and
unbiased
manner.
Former
recruiter David
Alan Carter put
the Web's most
popular resume
writing
services
through their
paces –
comparing
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quality,
customer
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pricing and
more. See who
came out on
top...
Reviews
of Resume
Writers
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Sidebar:
Resume writing isn't a cake walk. Beyond the actual writing,
there's the overall look and style of the resume, the benefits
(or lack thereof) of templates, Word vs PDF versions, and any
number of pitfalls to avoid.
Now, you can do this. It's certainly within your
power to put together a polished, professional-looking
resume... with some effort. We know about effort. Every resume
we wrote took us effort, plenty of it, for ten long
years
(see Who We
Are).
To help ease the burden of template selection, formatting
and organization, an inexpensive Resume
Builder might be worth considering. We review the most
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| David Alan
Carter is a former recruiter and the
founder of Resume One of Cincinnati. For more
than ten years, he personally crafted thousands
of resumes for satisfied clients from all
occupational walks of life. David has compiled
a collection of real-life resume
objectives, by profession, at
http://www.Resume
Objective.info. Look for your profession in the
table of contents along the right hand
side. |

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