| Perhaps I get more cynical as I get older, but I get really annoyed when applicants put 'fluff' on their CV. I've recently been interviewing for low to mid level IT jobs.<p>To give a few examples of the things I've come across in the last month: * SSH protocol Several applicants have listed this. It always gets my attention because a) I don't believe simply being able to connect to a host via SSH is a noteworthy skill, b) if you're actually into the protocol itself I will probably love you. It always turns out to be the former. I try to salvage that by asking some more pointy questions such as 'explain to roughly how I would tunnel with putty?' which get blank stares. * Linux command line This is touch and go in terms of relevance. I guess it depends just how junior you are, as well as the specifics of the role (yes I would tailor my CV to a role). When I ask you what 'cat' does I would expect an answer. Said person could not tell me what the default shell was under CentOS. Again, a lot of people fall short under questioning. Being able to change directories does not qualify for a CV mention. * PHP (Zend OO) Very specific example but this applies to any scripting/programming language mentioned on the CV. If you claim something specific, be prepared to answer specific questions. If you put 'Zend OO' and it turns out you read the cover of a book about Zend (literally admitted) and 'did a course in OO PHP' whilst your real work is fully procedural, please be prepared for a frown. Now, am I being too cynical with these juniors? Perhaps working in a city like London makes it hard to see the forest for the trees, but I am sorely disappointed with perfectly capable people ruining their own chances by senselessly fluffing their CVs. |
I edit CVs on the side (because I'm an editor), and I find people 'fluff' their applications for a wide variety of professions.
The advice I generally offer is this, and maybe you can confirm/deny whether it applies to your hiring approach?
1) Wage war on adjectives, they offer the reader nothing and merely take up space. 2) Talk about projects, not positions or skills – in the course of discussing the project, discuss honestly what skills you brought to it and what your role was; articulate what you learned on the way; and tell me the conclusion of the project. It can be bullet points, but let it tell a story that's easy to understand. 3) Discuss outcomes. If your project was scaled, resulted in a sale, became a template for similar initiatives, or made your colleagues' lives easier, discuss that outcome.
It would be nice to learn whether I'm steering people in the right direction, if you don't mind sharing... In any event, when I have to advise on a new hire, I usually appeal to those three criteria when reading a resume, and I toss anything that doesn't meet it.