How To Replace Your Resume’s Overused Keywords/Phrases
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While we have good intentions when we use common phrases to describe our abilities, the fact is we are only serving to bore hiring managers and recruiters! Many of these skills - teamwork, dedication, enthusiasm - are ones that are simply expected in today’s workplace and don’t do the job of making you stand out to employers. In fact, hiring managers see them so often on resumes that they often don’t even notice them anymore.



For example, people commonly state they have “great communication skills”. While that is a good trait to possess, is more or less expected and tells them nothing about how you’ve demonstrated this skill, or the results it has created.



A great way to convey your communication skills is to provide proof through quality (e.g. examples) and quantity (e.g. measureable results or evidence of impact) to pump them up and actually show you are an ace communicator! A suggestion would be “Sharp, articulate communicator as proven by multiple large-scale presentations and applauded departmental reports.” You could follow this up with bulleted details about the presentations and reports you have completed.



Here are some of the worst offenders followed by questions you can ask yourself in order to find find better alternatives and bring your resume back to life:



“Great Communication Skills” - Quantity/Quality Questions: Did you improve means of communication within your company/department? How? Did you lead teams? Did you present content to a crowd? Did you organize presentations? Did you negotiate with clients/vendors? Did you resolve conflicts? How?



“Team player” - Quantity/Quality Questions: Did you contribute to group dynamics in your company (rather than just participate)? How? Did you organize and/or lead any groups? Did you work cross-departmentally? How?



“Problem solver” - Quantity/Quality Questions: Were you presented with a big problem? How did you fix it? Did people come to you for help in your job? Explain. What is your problem-solving method?



“Hard working” - Quantity/Quality Questions: Do you have examples of projects or events in which you worked late/on weekends when you didn’t have to? Did you earn accolades for your hard work? Quantify your hard work (quotas you have exceeded, impressive production results).



“Self-motivated” - Quantity/Quality Questions: Do you work independently? Make your own schedule? Work remotely? Are you a motivator for others? Have you created results for your company (e.g. saved money by proactively auditing reports)? How do you motivate yourself? Give examples.



The bottom line is that while these phrases are well-meaning, they don’t convey the extent of your abilities in these areas and result in an unimpressive resume to hiring managers and recruiters who read dozens of resumes each day. You must chose powerful wording and add quality and/or quantity to prove your worth!