Resume Objective Killing Your Job Search?

Want to breathe new life into your job search campaign? Toss your old resume objective and remember... it’s not about you. That’s right, it’s all about the hiring official. His wants, his needs, his life. Empathize with him in your resume objective, and be ready to get the phone.
Does your resume objective read like fairy tale written just for you? 'Seeking a challenging position offering competitive compensation, limited travel, and advancement opportunities to senior management.'

If this happens to be your current resume objective, you should be aware that the prospective employer you’ve targeted will actually be using his wingtip shoe to compress that resume to the bottom of his trash can while uttering expletives that will clear the reception area of every last salesman. While the resume objective above might actually be our goal in life, it's not the kind of goal that is going to motivate a hiring official to give us the time of the day. When your resume hits the desk of a hiring official, you've got one chance 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 the first thing you need to know to keep the pulse in your resume, and your job search out of intensive care.

The Resume Objective is all about the Hiring Official

Say what? That's right, contrary to conventional thinking, your resume 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. 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

Before putting pen to paper (or finger to keyboard), research your chosen 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 – the people (you hope) will be reading your resume. Acme Manufacturing, with it's generic products and cardboard cutout employees is gone like Mayberry - if it ever existed in the first place. In it's 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 resume. Otherwise, you may never make it to the face-to-face.

Bring it all together

By doing your homework on your prospective field, specific company and target position, you're 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 offering 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. The important thing is that you've kept your resume alive, and made it over the first hurdle in the screening process. You’re in the game.

David Alan Carter is a former headhunter 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. The author of The Top 10 Checklist for an Effective Resume, David has compiled a collection of Real-Life Resume Objectives, by profession, at ResumeObjective.info.
   By David Alan Carter
Published: 8/22/2008
 
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