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Bokeh wrote: » There was an article recently on yahoo jobs that says the objective statement is not necessary any more on resumes. Everyone knows the objective is to get employment, either first time or a new position. If I can find the link I'll post it. Found the link:The New Resume Rules: What's In and What's Out
captobvious wrote: » +1 The objective is unnecessary!
veritas_libertas wrote: » +1, I don't use one.
JDMurray wrote: » I've always had an OBJECTIVES section at the top of my resume to clearly state type of position(s) that I'm interested in. When I'm on the other side of the desk and looking at resumes, I find an OBJECTIVES section is often more concise than what's written on cover letters. When you have to comb through 100+ resumes in a day, it's nice to quickly discern if someone is a possible fit for a position or not, and an OBJECTIVES section helps me do that.
RouteThisWay wrote: » What are some good examples of objectives you have come upon? I always got the feeling by place an objective, I was... stating the obvious, you know?
JDMurray wrote: » What is obvious to you is probably not obvious to the resume reader. In fact, your average pile of IT resumes contains people wanting to work as sysadmins, netadmins, security analysts, programmers, and a variety of specialists (e.g., storage, virtualization, architects, quality control). An objectives statement helps your resume get consideration for the type of job(s) you want and quickly removes you from consideration for jobs that you don't want. Start an objectives statement with "I desire employment..." or " I desire a career opportunity..." and follow it with "as an <job title>" or "in the field of <job field>":"I desire employment as a Windows system administrator." "I desire a career opportunity working in the field of information security research." "I desire a position as a game developer for mobile devices." Short, plain, and to-the-point. The next sentance will elaborate your desire:"My experience with enterprise-class networks..." "My extensive training in ..." "My academic studies ..." The last sentence should sum it up:"The ability to ... is my ideal objective." "A solid foundation in ... is what I am looking to obtain." "My passion about ... drives my desire for this career." So two or three sentences is all you need. Don't put in anything about job level, such as "junior" or "entry-level." Let the reader decide what level you are. Add "senior" or "executive" only if you will not take lesser a lesser position. And don't go overboard trying to sell yourself. Just put in generaic statements that you don't need to change for every job submission (that's what a cover letter is for).
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