How to Avoid Exaggerating In Your Resume
When you’re drafting a resume, it is tempting to stretch
the truth some so that you appear to be more impressive than maybe
your skills might indicate. However, while there is such a thing as
packaging your resume in a smart way, choosing words that tell the
truth, yet sound sensational, for example, you want to avoid
flat-out exaggerating.
So, how can you avoid crossing the fine line from smart resume
packaging to exaggeration? Here are a few ideas to consider
…
Choose Creative Ways to Describe Your Skills and
Accomplishments
It’s one thing to choose a creative way to describe what
you’ve accomplished in prior positions; fudging the truth is
another matter altogether. If you are able to find creative words
for what you’ve actually done, you’re considered a
smart cookie. However, if you fudge the truth and tell a story that
didn’t happen, you’re considered a liar.
It’s very important that you carefully choose what you
write in your resume because everything can be tracked. So if you
tell an employer that you were managed 10 employees in packing
department, when in actuality you managed handing out daily
assignments drawn up by the real manager of the packing department,
you could find yourself in deep trouble for fudging the truth.
Using action words like managed, oversaw, developed and arranged
are good ways to make small tasks look bigger, as long as using
them doesn’t result in a lie.
Get Used to Telling the Truth
How do you find the happy medium between exaggerating and
underselling yourself? The best way is to tell the truth, the whole
truth and nothing but the truth. For instance, if you’ve
managed an average of 50 calls per day, successfully routing them
to the appropriate party via the company’s complex phone
system, yet on your resume, you write that you were “in
charge of answering phones,” you’re only telling a
half-truth.
Of course, you don’t want to say that you developed the
intricate phone system yourself because that would be an outright
lie. So what’s a happy medium? Tell them that you
“managed an average of 50 calls per day, successfully routing
them to the appropriate party via the company’s complex phone
system.” Do you see how that works? You were much more
specific about what you did and were able to tell the truth, making
your accomplishment much more impressive without having to
lie.
Use Your Cover Letter to Back You Up
If you feel that you simply do not have enough experience to
make a hard sell in your resume without exaggerating, use your
cover letter as a way to tell your stories in detail. Since resumes
only leave room for one- and two-liners, they can feel restrictive.
By using your cover letter to better describe your experience, you
can help to make up for what your resume lacks.
You don’t want to get into the habit of stretching the
truth in your job applications. One little “white lie”
can come back to bite you in a big way. Instead, find ways to
creatively tell the truth about your accomplishments. No matter how
small you think they are, they are yours and you should be proud of
them.




