![]() Having been responsible for something isn’t something you did-it’s something that happened to you. Reading this term, the recruiter can almost picture the C-average, uninspired employee mechanically fulfilling his job requirements-no more, no less. ![]() See the preceding comment about unnecessary terms. (Still, don’t put that on your resume either.) 2. If your salary is not negotiable, that would be somewhat unusual. If you’re wasting a precious line of your resume on this term, it looks as though you’re padding - that you’ve run out of things to talk about. ![]() Wouldn’t you rather make them happy? It’s time to start raking out your resume, starting with these (and similar) terms. Recruiters, HR folks and hiring managers see these terms over and over again, and it makes them sad. The problem is language: Most resumes are a thicket of deadwood words and phrases-empty cliches, annoying jargon and recycled buzzwords. Your resume needs an update-that is, if your resume is like that of most people, it’s not as good as it could be.
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