Does a Short Term Job Belong on Your Resume?

Does a Short Term Job Belong on Your Resume?

It's true; short term jobs are technically frowned upon on resumes. It used to be that you could get away with not putting a short term job on a resume. You don’t want to come off as irresponsible but you also don’t want to lie. The reality in this digital age with extensive job search is that you may actually hurt yourself more if you don’t put the job on the resume.

This begs the question, how do you approach it? Use our tips below to help you address a short term job on your resume.

Own the reason for leaving the job.

Whether you left the job for a good reason or a bad reason, you need to own it. Of course, depending on the situation there will be a couple of different ways to handle it.

If you had a positive experience at the job but it ended unexpectedly you can use it as an example of how you deal with adversity. Recruiters know that sometimes these things happen so this is a perfect opportunity to show your great attitude.

If your reason for departing is a bad one then it’s important that you be as diplomatic as possible. There’s no worse red flag than someone throwing a former employer under the bus, even if they did have a horrific experience and kind of deserve it.

Additionally, you can use the experience to your advantage. For example, if you left or were fired from the other position because you could not work copious amounts of overtime, but you were flexible to work five to ten hours of occasional overtime, and the prospective employer only needed periodic overtime that could be a good reason to bring up the conflict that led to the termination.

Indicate the nature of your short term role.

If the position in question was contract or short term in nature then it’s in your best interest to mention that on the resume.

If you did contract roles back-to-back, then consider putting the client names and titles as bullets under one employment. For instance you can have a resume section titled, MARKETING CONSULTING ASSIGNMENTS (OVERALL DATE RANGE) and list each client, date, achievement and function title as a bullet under the employer heading. This can be much more visually appealing than having a separate heading for each one.

Include everything on the employment application.

In the age of Google its imperative that you list everything on the employment application. Simply put, just because you don’t put your short term job on the application doesn’t mean they won’t find it.

Whereas on a resume you may be able to get away without mentioning it, an employment application is a totally different ball game. A resume is seen more as a marketing tool by employers whereas an application is official documentation of your work history. It’s the application employers use to run your background check, not your resume.

If you are interested in working with Lisa Rangel, an accomplished executive resume and LinkedIn Profile writer, LinkedIn Job Seeker Group Moderator and job search consultant, to achieve the social media exposure and land the interviews you want, sign up for an exploratory call now and learn about how Chameleon Resumes can help.

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Lisa Rangel, Managing Director of Chameleon Resumes, is a 10-time certified executive resume writer, former 13-year recruiter, LinkedIn Job Seeker Premium Group Moderator, and globally-recognized job search consultant. Chameleon Resumes is chosen by leading executives and high-potential professionals to brand their story, identify the right executive positions and land the right role to advance their career fast. Chameleon Resumes has been named a Forbes Top 100 Career Website.

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Jeff Johannigman

Career Consultant | Employee Development Trainer | Guru of Gamification

9y

Hi Lisa, Good advice in general. Two issues I see that make this difficult: 1) The need to keep a resume short. Most every article on resume writing mandates "no more than two pages. Keep it well-spaced and readable". But every short stint adds 3-4 lines to just cover basics of name /date/place/description/reason for leaving." 2) Recruiters with short attention spans who don't read the resume, only scan the employers/titles/dates. I have had some short stints at start-ups that ended because the company went belly-up. In spite of clearly stating "Company closed" on my resume, I have had numerous recruiters ask, "So why did you leave this job?" and treat my answer as if it were news to them. Any advice on overcoming those challenges? Jeff

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Odis Ross

Certified IT Professional specializing in enterprise active directory administration & identity and access management.

9y

This was a helpful post. Thanks for sharing!

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David Moore

Recruiting Manager | Senior Mortgage Consultant

9y

the truth will set you free (and prevent you from being disqualified for a good job because of a dishonest act).

Jonathan Goohs

Investment Advisor Representative at Dipaola Financial Group

9y

Excellent advice on an important 'gray area' topic.

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Ricardo Porcayo

Restaurant General Manager

9y

Outstanding advice!

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