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by atomicnumber3
322 days ago
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What do you want to see, then? Colorful prose? I and a few others really did save my company 10 million dollars one year. It was in EC2 spend for a hadoop cluster. I can tell you how we did it and who did what. Yes it was actual dollars we would have otherwise paid to AWS, it is not funny money calculated by looking at sticker rates and ignoring our discounts (which were large). I'm proud of this and it was one of my largest impacts at the company. What would you have me put on my resume? "Decreased EC2 spend by a whole bunch!"? "Reduced EC2 spend"? I don't get where this hatred of numbers on resumes is coming from. Is much of it probably bullshit? Yeah, just like most resumes. But I expect you to sort through it the same way you do the rest of the resume. Ask them about it. I can tell you the whole story of mine. I'd expect others can do the same. And if they stammer and crack, now you know how exaggerated it was. |
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When I read resumes, accomplishments meant next to nothing to me. I was looking for capabilities.
Your EC2 example is probably an exception to what I'm about to say because EC2 is very well known and you can quantify the difference you made in real dollars. But, 99% of the time I have no frame of reference and therefore no way to evaluate claimed accomplishments on a resume.
Oh, you managed accounts totaling $24MM in accrued receivables annually? Sounds impressive, but what if every one of your peers were managing $30–40MM and you were well known to be a slacker? Etc.
It's much more useful to me to know what classes of problem you can solve and which tools / techniques / technologies you're proficient with toward solving them. Descriptive statistics do very little for me.