10 Boilerplate Phrases That Kill Resumesby: Liz Ryan
The 2009 job market is very different from job markets of the past. If you
haven't job-hunted in a while, the changes in the landscape can throw you
for a loop.

One of the biggest changes is the shift in what constitutes a strong
resume<http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/resume>.
Years ago, we could dig into the Resume Boilerplate grab-bag and pull out a
phrase to fill out a sentence or bullet point on our resume. Everybody used
the same boilerplate phrases, so we knew we couldn't go wrong choosing one
of them -- or many -- to throw into your resume.

Things have changed. Stodgy boilerplate phrases in your resume today mark
you as uncreative and "vocabulary challenged." You can make your
resume<http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/resume> more
compelling and human-sounding by rooting out and replacing the boring
corporate-speak phrases that litter it, and replacing them with human
language -- things that people like you or I would actually say.

Here are the worst 10 boilerplate phrases -- the ones to seek out and
destroy in your resume as soon as possible:

   - Results-oriented professional
   - Cross-functional teams
   - More than [x] years of progressively responsible experience
   - Superior (or excellent) communication skills
   - Strong work ethic
   - Met or exceeded expectations
   - Proven track record of success
   - Works well with all levels of staff
   - Team player
   - Bottom-line orientation

You can do better. What about adding a human voice to your
resume<http://hotjobs.yahoo.com/resume>?
Here's an example:

"I'm a Marketing Researcher who's driven by curiosity about why people buy
what they do. At XYZ Industries, I used consumer surveys and online-forum
analysis to uncover the reasons why consumers chose our competitors over us;
our sales grew twenty percent over the next six months as a result. I'm
equally at home on sales calls or analyzing data in seclusion, and up to
speed on traditional and new-millennium research tools and approaches. I'm
fanatical about understanding our marketplace better every day, week and
month -- and have helped my employers' brands grow dramatically as a
result."

You don't have to write resumes that sound like robots wrote them. A
human-voiced resume is the new black -- try it!

*Liz Ryan is a 25-year HR veteran, former Fortune 500 VP and an
internationally recognized expert on careers and the new millennium
workplace. Contact Liz at [email protected] or join the Ask Liz Ryan online
community at www.asklizryan/group.
The opinions expressed in this column are solely the author's.*
*
*

-- 
"In complete darkness, we are all the same, it is only our knowledge and
wisdom that separates us, don't let your eyes deceive you." J. Jackson

"El amor es como un reloj de arena; mientras se llena el corazón, el cerebro
se vacia."

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