English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-11-16 19:17:44 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Other - Education

9 answers

A career objective is generally used in graduate resumes more experienced job seekers use a professional objective.
The resume objective should be
Clear and concise.
Contains resume action verbs.
Contains job & skill related keywords.
Focus on the employers needs rather than yours.

Your objective should be more what you can do for the employer rather than vice versa.

If the potential employer sees that your objectives are his targets than you have become a potential candidate, this is a good technique to quickly grab the attention of the reader.

more details on http://www.cvtips.com/resume_career_objective.html

2006-11-17 08:25:13 · answer #1 · answered by ciprian_olaru1985 3 · 1 0

the "objective" category on your resume is used to state what your objective, or purpose, is in submitting this resume to the specific company that you're submitting it to. It is usually very short. A general statement to make under the objective category would be, "I am seeking the opportunity to use my skills and experience to enhance the success of your company." It is always best to write a resume corresponding to the specific position and/or company that you are applying for at the time, rather than having a general resume for all types of job positions. So, fine tune your objective to the position you're applying for. For examply, if you're applying to be a tutor, you could say something like, "I am seeking the opportunity to use my tutoring and teaching experiences and my natural leadership abilities to enhance the success of your company." Make sense?

2006-11-16 19:29:57 · answer #2 · answered by christina rose 4 · 1 0

{ "To obtain a responsible and challenging position where my education and work experience will have valuable application.

Seeking a position in the sales department with an opportunity for advancement

Seeking a challenging career with a progressive organization which will utilize my skills, abilities and education in management, product management, operations, purchasing and buying.

You can stand out from the crowd if you'll just write your objective from the employer's point of view, instead of your own. Sounds simple, doesn't it?

It is.

All you have to do when writing your objective is make sure it answers this question: "What's in it for me?" That's the question on every employer's mind as he or she reads your resume.

Here's an example objective, to get you started:


Management position in procurement where over 10 years of experience will add value to operations.

Avoid such trite phrases as: "seeking a chance for advancement," or "where my skills will be utilized," or "where I can further my career." I've seen each of these on resumes that were badly hampered as a result."

So, to keep your objective from being objectionable (and torpedoing your job search), put the focus where it belongs -- on the employer and their needs.
" }

Good luck in your job searching.

2006-11-16 19:36:07 · answer #3 · answered by Jeison Iyasu 2 · 1 0

The objective of a resume is to let your interviewer know all about you and your work history and knowledge history...
It is to acquaint them with your skills and experience and learned subjects so your interviewer may evaluate you on your possible hiring...

2006-11-16 19:33:21 · answer #4 · answered by aspenkdp2003 7 · 0 0

to show potential employer you've got what it takes to not only be a team player but to also emplore the driven ability to understand you will be as good as you're trained and with that training excell within the company

2006-11-16 19:31:10 · answer #5 · answered by mommyseldest 3 · 1 0

It is the opening statement to let your future employer know what you are looking for in your career. Basically you are introducing yourself and what you want to do.

2006-11-16 19:27:08 · answer #6 · answered by Tenchu 4 · 1 0

its your chance to tell the employer what makes you so special. don't just make it a rewrite of your application -- tell what special things you did outside of your routine job description -- all the routine stuff should be on your application. employee of the month awards, committe heads. anything really.

2006-11-16 19:32:00 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

the objective is where you state what you hope to glean from the company you aspire to work for and also a brief description of your strongest attributes....."I hope to use my ____ skills to streamline the _____ department at _________.

2006-11-16 19:32:09 · answer #8 · answered by Misty E 1 · 1 0

a bullshit paper so you can lie about yourself and get hired

2006-11-16 19:27:46 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers