Do not spend too much time on this. Resumes are meant to briefly recap your work and educational history, and point out what skills you have or have used. An employer may receive hundreds of resumes to review, and a professional hirer will skim them all, spending on average less than 20 seconds per resume, and then pick 3-10 to interview. So being concise, honest, and organized are the 3 keys to an effective resume. Having an objective is not even necessary on a resume, and does take of space. Every employer knows you are applying for a job, want a job, want to be fulfilled in that job, and want to be successful, so why waste their time and your time telling them that? However, if you insist in having an "objective" then try something like this
OBJECTIVE: Utilize my skill set, work ethic and experience in a challenging position where I can contribute to the growth and profitability of a leading company in the (fill the blank...retailing, banking, insurance, etc) industry.
2006-08-23 05:20:03
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Excellent question. It can be argued the objective is the most important element of the resume and it needs to be carefully worded.
It is important that each onjective be tailored to the specific position to which you are applying. This is not optional. Make it very specific.
A qualtiy career objective states tthe following:
1. The position for which you are applying.
2. The specific skills you have that will enable you to be successful in the position. Preferrably skills you know they are looking for or can infer from the job description.
ALWAYS write it from the perspective of the employer. What are they looking for? Give it to them right up front so they'll continue reviewing your resume.
Here's a sample.
An account manager position ultilizing my proven communication and analysis skills along with my ability to bring projects in on time and on budget.
2006-08-23 05:32:23
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answer #2
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answered by The Professor 3
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One website continually! you're able to get your resume all the way down to one website, yet that would not propose that's universal. you may desire to be direct and to the factor of the interest itemizing and the employer. A resume only gets skimmed so it should be to the factor and dynamic so it stands proud and shows you have the preparation and experience for the area. be sure that's for sure written and has NO typos. Have it appeared at by ability of as many people as obtainable who've experience with resumes and take all advice to suggestions despite in case you won't agree. Take resume training at your college additionally. people who overview resumes for jobs are very choosy.
2016-11-05 11:12:21
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answer #3
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answered by ai 4
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your objective is your career goal. it is specific to the job that you are applying to. For example: Objective: Position as a Head Chef in a 5 star restaurant. You use these because a company can have 50 different positions that they are hiring for and they want to know specifically what you are looking for. Not everyone uses the word objective. Other people use words like Job Target. Leaving you some links.
2006-08-23 05:18:49
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answer #4
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answered by Justme 4
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You'll need multiple objectives depending on the kind of company you are sending the particular resume to.
If you ask me objective is a stupid category because if people were honest they would say - "to find a job".
Include some short term types of goals - nothing that would threaten the job of the person interviewing you.
2006-08-23 05:15:45
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answer #5
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answered by BettyBoop 5
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Sometimes, you might find it better to make the objective kind of broad...this way it fits for multiple potential interviews at different companies. I feel it important to mention on my resume objective that I am looking for a position within a company that allows for different learning experiences, and facilitates growth within the organization. I think this lets the interviewer know that you might be interested in learning different departments/positions, (you're flexible) and that you have would have a loyalty to the company and expect promotions to be internal.
2006-08-23 05:14:11
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answer #6
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answered by nicole_d82 2
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An Objective is the goal of an action-plan. The 'standard' Objective is "To {verb} {something} in order to {final result}." (Of course, that's just off`n the top o` my head ... no direct research there.)
My 'objective' is somewhat Biblical: 'To fill the world and subdue it, in order to remake the world in my own image.' If you're writing this resume for a specific application (which is generally recommended), you probably want to think of a fill-in-the-blank question/response: "Why do you want this job?" "Skills this job will give me shall (obviously) help me to be able {[T]o [verb] [something] in order to [final result]}."
The '(obviously)' changes with almost every job, which is why you might want a different resume for each type of job.
2006-08-23 05:25:28
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answer #7
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answered by Uncle MythMan 3
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I NEVER LIST AN OBJECTIVE ON MY RESUME. I feel it limits me. If your experience is all over the place, then maybe you need an objective so the potential employer is clear as to what you are looking for.
2006-08-23 06:54:45
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answer #8
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answered by hirebookkeeper 6
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I don't use an objective in my resume, I write cover letters instead. I used to have one but I thought it was too limiting so I deleted it.
2006-08-23 05:13:09
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answer #9
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answered by dmc81076 4
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tailor it to the jobs you are applying for, but make it general. browse other people's resumes online and figure out what works best for you. If you're still in college, there should be a job placement office that helps with job searches and resumes and such.
2006-08-23 05:11:58
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answer #10
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answered by echo7 2
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