Having read literally hundreds of resumes in the last few months, I have come to one definite conclusion. There is no value to the first thing candidates want you to read on their resume - The Career Objective. The Career Objective was intended to be a statement of your ambitions and expectations, yet it has turned into a chore for both the candidate and the recruiter. The candidate struggles to fiddle with adjectives, hyperbole and tenses in a desperate bid to make their statement stand out from the rest, while the recruiter is left with the task of demystifying a candidate from the Shakespearean prose that is facing them and to figure out how this one sentence differentiates this candidate from the rest.
I will be the first to admit that in my more youthful past, I have myself spent an hour or two sharpening the prosaic of the Objective of my career even before it had begun. It ended up being a melee of words like "challenge", "cutting-edge", "research" and "work-life balance". I will never know if that effort helped me land jobs or the interviews that preceded them.
Most Career Objectives are a mash of the words "challenge", "skills", "growth", "organization" and of course "career". Toss them in a bowl with a random assortment of adjectives, whip up some hyperbole, and top it all with a dash of originality, and voila, you have an all new Career Objective. Here's a random sampling of a few that prove the futility of all the effort that goes into coming up with one -
"Seeking Graphic/Web Designer position in an organization that provides innovative and challenging opportunities."
Or like this - "".
My intention here is not to poke fun at the Objectives people come up with. Heck, I came up with one such monstrosity myself in the past. Instead, I question the very objective of having to come up with one for yourself. Most of us use resumes from friends who just landed a nice, cushy job as a template for our own. This ensures our objectives in life have a hauntingly high correlation with those of our "successful" friends. Very often, the objectives themselves are written in flawless grammar compared to the more original remainder of the resume.
All recruiters soon come to the conclusion that most objectives have zero entropy. Why then do we still carry on with this pointless exercise of inventing a poetic vision of one's career and hoping someone will care about it? My sincere advice, for what it's worth, is to do away with inventing an Objective for your career. Let your work speak for itself. Your hyperbole and adjective are better reserved for any challenging work you have attempted and/or completed, and the skills you have developed doing them.
I will be the first to admit that in my more youthful past, I have myself spent an hour or two sharpening the prosaic of the Objective of my career even before it had begun. It ended up being a melee of words like "challenge", "cutting-edge", "research" and "work-life balance". I will never know if that effort helped me land jobs or the interviews that preceded them.
Most Career Objectives are a mash of the words "challenge", "skills", "growth", "organization" and of course "career". Toss them in a bowl with a random assortment of adjectives, whip up some hyperbole, and top it all with a dash of originality, and voila, you have an all new Career Objective. Here's a random sampling of a few that prove the futility of all the effort that goes into coming up with one -
- Peak of the bell-curve: "To pursue a challenging and growth oriented career where I can make meaningful contribution to the organization together with continuously enhancing my skills and knowledge."
- Slightly to the right: "To secure a challenging position where I can effectively contribute my skills as Software Professional, possessing competent Technical Skills."
- Slightly to the left: "To have a challenging and exciting career where I can explore my potential and become one of the best technicians and grow with the organization I work for."
- Remarkable: "To gain specialization in software development and establish myself at a remarkable position in information technology sector to efficiently contribute my skills forward the organization."
- Might as well add other obvious characteristics, like "I will wear clothes to work": "To pursue a career in software industry as an efficient dependable employee being resourceful to organization and affable towards my colleagues."
- Seeking a full-stop: "To pursue a challenging career in a fast growing software development organization that provides an environment for continuous learning, where hardwork, creativity and commitment are well rewarded and utilize the same for consistently rendering my service with enthusiasm in achieving the organization objectives and goals."
- Adjective attack: "To pursue an outstanding career and be a part of progressive organization that gives propensity to enhance my knowledge and skills which can be better extended for organizational as well as personal intensification."
"Seeking Graphic/Web Designer position in an organization that provides innovative and challenging opportunities."
Or like this - "".
My intention here is not to poke fun at the Objectives people come up with. Heck, I came up with one such monstrosity myself in the past. Instead, I question the very objective of having to come up with one for yourself. Most of us use resumes from friends who just landed a nice, cushy job as a template for our own. This ensures our objectives in life have a hauntingly high correlation with those of our "successful" friends. Very often, the objectives themselves are written in flawless grammar compared to the more original remainder of the resume.
All recruiters soon come to the conclusion that most objectives have zero entropy. Why then do we still carry on with this pointless exercise of inventing a poetic vision of one's career and hoping someone will care about it? My sincere advice, for what it's worth, is to do away with inventing an Objective for your career. Let your work speak for itself. Your hyperbole and adjective are better reserved for any challenging work you have attempted and/or completed, and the skills you have developed doing them.
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