Adding skills to your resume that are not part of your job description?

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I work for an insurance broker that manages several billion in assets. I do a lot of analysis and I have taught myself Python to solve analytical problems.



This is not a part of my official job function; it is just something I have done above and beyond because I am a curious fellow.



Most of the in-house analysis is done using Excel and extracting data from a database (don't ask - the database dev doesn't really know how to build a database...) and I just wanted to up my game. It makes me more effective at work and I run statistical analysis using pandas and numpy. I have started to look into machine learning as well. I make sure that none of this affects my day to day duties.



My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a résumé appropriate?







share|improve this question






















  • If the skill is something like cooking or playing a guitar, it would be highly irrelevant to this insurance brokage position. But since it's a programming skill, and you found specific reasons on how your skills can apply to the things you will be working on, I highly recommend you to do it. On your resume I would advise you to write down something related to additional skills: statistical analysis using pandas and numpy [in python], and in your interview, highly recommend going in-depth with it, and what you've done prior with said skills (school project? personal projects?). Good luck!!
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:26











  • I also recommend going even more specific in the things your skills can contribute to in an insurance sense, like machine learning on Excel spreadsheets (I have no idea -- get creative on this one). It's a good idea to tailor your skills on your resume to a particular job, especially one you care about.
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:28
















up vote
6
down vote

favorite
1












I work for an insurance broker that manages several billion in assets. I do a lot of analysis and I have taught myself Python to solve analytical problems.



This is not a part of my official job function; it is just something I have done above and beyond because I am a curious fellow.



Most of the in-house analysis is done using Excel and extracting data from a database (don't ask - the database dev doesn't really know how to build a database...) and I just wanted to up my game. It makes me more effective at work and I run statistical analysis using pandas and numpy. I have started to look into machine learning as well. I make sure that none of this affects my day to day duties.



My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a résumé appropriate?







share|improve this question






















  • If the skill is something like cooking or playing a guitar, it would be highly irrelevant to this insurance brokage position. But since it's a programming skill, and you found specific reasons on how your skills can apply to the things you will be working on, I highly recommend you to do it. On your resume I would advise you to write down something related to additional skills: statistical analysis using pandas and numpy [in python], and in your interview, highly recommend going in-depth with it, and what you've done prior with said skills (school project? personal projects?). Good luck!!
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:26











  • I also recommend going even more specific in the things your skills can contribute to in an insurance sense, like machine learning on Excel spreadsheets (I have no idea -- get creative on this one). It's a good idea to tailor your skills on your resume to a particular job, especially one you care about.
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:28












up vote
6
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
6
down vote

favorite
1






1





I work for an insurance broker that manages several billion in assets. I do a lot of analysis and I have taught myself Python to solve analytical problems.



This is not a part of my official job function; it is just something I have done above and beyond because I am a curious fellow.



Most of the in-house analysis is done using Excel and extracting data from a database (don't ask - the database dev doesn't really know how to build a database...) and I just wanted to up my game. It makes me more effective at work and I run statistical analysis using pandas and numpy. I have started to look into machine learning as well. I make sure that none of this affects my day to day duties.



My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a résumé appropriate?







share|improve this question














I work for an insurance broker that manages several billion in assets. I do a lot of analysis and I have taught myself Python to solve analytical problems.



This is not a part of my official job function; it is just something I have done above and beyond because I am a curious fellow.



Most of the in-house analysis is done using Excel and extracting data from a database (don't ask - the database dev doesn't really know how to build a database...) and I just wanted to up my game. It makes me more effective at work and I run statistical analysis using pandas and numpy. I have started to look into machine learning as well. I make sure that none of this affects my day to day duties.



My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a résumé appropriate?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 17 '14 at 15:41









starsplusplus

1,2741220




1,2741220










asked Mar 20 '14 at 14:38









spitfiredd

13615




13615











  • If the skill is something like cooking or playing a guitar, it would be highly irrelevant to this insurance brokage position. But since it's a programming skill, and you found specific reasons on how your skills can apply to the things you will be working on, I highly recommend you to do it. On your resume I would advise you to write down something related to additional skills: statistical analysis using pandas and numpy [in python], and in your interview, highly recommend going in-depth with it, and what you've done prior with said skills (school project? personal projects?). Good luck!!
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:26











  • I also recommend going even more specific in the things your skills can contribute to in an insurance sense, like machine learning on Excel spreadsheets (I have no idea -- get creative on this one). It's a good idea to tailor your skills on your resume to a particular job, especially one you care about.
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:28
















  • If the skill is something like cooking or playing a guitar, it would be highly irrelevant to this insurance brokage position. But since it's a programming skill, and you found specific reasons on how your skills can apply to the things you will be working on, I highly recommend you to do it. On your resume I would advise you to write down something related to additional skills: statistical analysis using pandas and numpy [in python], and in your interview, highly recommend going in-depth with it, and what you've done prior with said skills (school project? personal projects?). Good luck!!
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:26











  • I also recommend going even more specific in the things your skills can contribute to in an insurance sense, like machine learning on Excel spreadsheets (I have no idea -- get creative on this one). It's a good idea to tailor your skills on your resume to a particular job, especially one you care about.
    – theGreenCabbage
    Mar 20 '14 at 16:28















If the skill is something like cooking or playing a guitar, it would be highly irrelevant to this insurance brokage position. But since it's a programming skill, and you found specific reasons on how your skills can apply to the things you will be working on, I highly recommend you to do it. On your resume I would advise you to write down something related to additional skills: statistical analysis using pandas and numpy [in python], and in your interview, highly recommend going in-depth with it, and what you've done prior with said skills (school project? personal projects?). Good luck!!
– theGreenCabbage
Mar 20 '14 at 16:26





If the skill is something like cooking or playing a guitar, it would be highly irrelevant to this insurance brokage position. But since it's a programming skill, and you found specific reasons on how your skills can apply to the things you will be working on, I highly recommend you to do it. On your resume I would advise you to write down something related to additional skills: statistical analysis using pandas and numpy [in python], and in your interview, highly recommend going in-depth with it, and what you've done prior with said skills (school project? personal projects?). Good luck!!
– theGreenCabbage
Mar 20 '14 at 16:26













I also recommend going even more specific in the things your skills can contribute to in an insurance sense, like machine learning on Excel spreadsheets (I have no idea -- get creative on this one). It's a good idea to tailor your skills on your resume to a particular job, especially one you care about.
– theGreenCabbage
Mar 20 '14 at 16:28




I also recommend going even more specific in the things your skills can contribute to in an insurance sense, like machine learning on Excel spreadsheets (I have no idea -- get creative on this one). It's a good idea to tailor your skills on your resume to a particular job, especially one you care about.
– theGreenCabbage
Mar 20 '14 at 16:28










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
12
down vote



accepted










On their own, the skills are not related to your job, but you made them relate to it through adaptation. This shows that:



  • You are capable of experimenting with new (or original) ways to increase your
    productivity.


  • You are able to understand, even if at a basic level,
    some programming concepts. This can easily make an employer realize
    how you could branch out if the need arises, and provide support in
    areas that are probably out of others' reach.


And most importantly:



  • You love your job enough to actually devote extra effort to it. That makes you a great choice by default.

So yes, it would be a bad idea not to get them on your resume.






share|improve this answer





























    up vote
    13
    down vote













    Absolutely. It's also incredibly helpful to mention during an interview that these activities weren't part of your official job functions, but that you wanted to go above and beyond, especially in that it made you more effective in your official job functions.






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      3
      down vote














      My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a
      resume appropriate?




      If you think these skills will be beneficial in your next job, then yes - list them.



      Since you say "It makes me more effective at work", then you clearly believe these skills are beneficial now - presumably they will continue to be beneficial for future employers, and you are ready and willing to discuss how that can benefit them.



      Resumes are about showcasing your talent in order to get an interview and later, a job. That talent is sometimes part of your current job description, and sometimes not.



      Use whatever you have to your best advantage.






      share|improve this answer





























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        Yes they are, but Use them on your CV when you need to, i.e. Matching a Job Description.



        You may get that extra responsibility otherwise.



        If you have Python experience and one day your Boss comes around and say's "You know Python don't you? We need you to write some programs" then you think "oh No, I shouldn't have put that on my CV". If you work in a Team, you will be taken out from the loop on Normal work because you are now working on a Project, Your friends in the team will have to cover your Normal Daily work thus creating more work for them and People will start wondering if you ever coming back to the team thus creating tension. And you probably wont get payed any extra cash for doing that and feel angry.



        I'm talking from experience, it happened to me once. i work in Computers. Don't get me wrong, i love my work, but sometimes having that extra skill on a CV can backfire for you and your team mates.



        People usually Add or Subtract Skills accordingly for each Job they Apply.



        If you did a course in Bread Making but your background is Finance then put that down on your CV if you want to get a Job in a Bakery.






        share|improve this answer





























          up vote
          0
          down vote













          I would say that your skills should affect your day-to-day duties...



          Assuming your duties consist of using Excel to analyze actuarial risk -- how does your scripting increase the quality of your analysis? My guess is that some combination of validation, speed, accuracy, (metrics, ideally quantifiable in some way) have improved.



          What kind of backend system does your company run? Anything involving SQL queries should be listed. If you import pymongo for anything, then Mongo/NoSQL should appear. If it's just HTML forms automation (the requests and lxml.html modules come in handy here)... whatever it is, list it.



          In the end, keep in mind that your resume is read first by a bot, so make use of whatever keywords you work with - "game the system" without making it obvious, and expact interviewers to BS-test you.



          Most importantly, drive a hard bargain. If you do it right and know your stuff and are patient you might be worth another $30K+.






          share|improve this answer




















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            5 Answers
            5






            active

            oldest

            votes








            5 Answers
            5






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes








            up vote
            12
            down vote



            accepted










            On their own, the skills are not related to your job, but you made them relate to it through adaptation. This shows that:



            • You are capable of experimenting with new (or original) ways to increase your
              productivity.


            • You are able to understand, even if at a basic level,
              some programming concepts. This can easily make an employer realize
              how you could branch out if the need arises, and provide support in
              areas that are probably out of others' reach.


            And most importantly:



            • You love your job enough to actually devote extra effort to it. That makes you a great choice by default.

            So yes, it would be a bad idea not to get them on your resume.






            share|improve this answer


























              up vote
              12
              down vote



              accepted










              On their own, the skills are not related to your job, but you made them relate to it through adaptation. This shows that:



              • You are capable of experimenting with new (or original) ways to increase your
                productivity.


              • You are able to understand, even if at a basic level,
                some programming concepts. This can easily make an employer realize
                how you could branch out if the need arises, and provide support in
                areas that are probably out of others' reach.


              And most importantly:



              • You love your job enough to actually devote extra effort to it. That makes you a great choice by default.

              So yes, it would be a bad idea not to get them on your resume.






              share|improve this answer
























                up vote
                12
                down vote



                accepted







                up vote
                12
                down vote



                accepted






                On their own, the skills are not related to your job, but you made them relate to it through adaptation. This shows that:



                • You are capable of experimenting with new (or original) ways to increase your
                  productivity.


                • You are able to understand, even if at a basic level,
                  some programming concepts. This can easily make an employer realize
                  how you could branch out if the need arises, and provide support in
                  areas that are probably out of others' reach.


                And most importantly:



                • You love your job enough to actually devote extra effort to it. That makes you a great choice by default.

                So yes, it would be a bad idea not to get them on your resume.






                share|improve this answer














                On their own, the skills are not related to your job, but you made them relate to it through adaptation. This shows that:



                • You are capable of experimenting with new (or original) ways to increase your
                  productivity.


                • You are able to understand, even if at a basic level,
                  some programming concepts. This can easily make an employer realize
                  how you could branch out if the need arises, and provide support in
                  areas that are probably out of others' reach.


                And most importantly:



                • You love your job enough to actually devote extra effort to it. That makes you a great choice by default.

                So yes, it would be a bad idea not to get them on your resume.







                share|improve this answer














                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer








                edited Mar 20 '14 at 15:51

























                answered Mar 20 '14 at 15:08







                user11026





























                    up vote
                    13
                    down vote













                    Absolutely. It's also incredibly helpful to mention during an interview that these activities weren't part of your official job functions, but that you wanted to go above and beyond, especially in that it made you more effective in your official job functions.






                    share|improve this answer
























                      up vote
                      13
                      down vote













                      Absolutely. It's also incredibly helpful to mention during an interview that these activities weren't part of your official job functions, but that you wanted to go above and beyond, especially in that it made you more effective in your official job functions.






                      share|improve this answer






















                        up vote
                        13
                        down vote










                        up vote
                        13
                        down vote









                        Absolutely. It's also incredibly helpful to mention during an interview that these activities weren't part of your official job functions, but that you wanted to go above and beyond, especially in that it made you more effective in your official job functions.






                        share|improve this answer












                        Absolutely. It's also incredibly helpful to mention during an interview that these activities weren't part of your official job functions, but that you wanted to go above and beyond, especially in that it made you more effective in your official job functions.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Mar 20 '14 at 14:41









                        panoptical

                        3,5761538




                        3,5761538




















                            up vote
                            3
                            down vote














                            My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a
                            resume appropriate?




                            If you think these skills will be beneficial in your next job, then yes - list them.



                            Since you say "It makes me more effective at work", then you clearly believe these skills are beneficial now - presumably they will continue to be beneficial for future employers, and you are ready and willing to discuss how that can benefit them.



                            Resumes are about showcasing your talent in order to get an interview and later, a job. That talent is sometimes part of your current job description, and sometimes not.



                            Use whatever you have to your best advantage.






                            share|improve this answer


























                              up vote
                              3
                              down vote














                              My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a
                              resume appropriate?




                              If you think these skills will be beneficial in your next job, then yes - list them.



                              Since you say "It makes me more effective at work", then you clearly believe these skills are beneficial now - presumably they will continue to be beneficial for future employers, and you are ready and willing to discuss how that can benefit them.



                              Resumes are about showcasing your talent in order to get an interview and later, a job. That talent is sometimes part of your current job description, and sometimes not.



                              Use whatever you have to your best advantage.






                              share|improve this answer
























                                up vote
                                3
                                down vote










                                up vote
                                3
                                down vote










                                My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a
                                resume appropriate?




                                If you think these skills will be beneficial in your next job, then yes - list them.



                                Since you say "It makes me more effective at work", then you clearly believe these skills are beneficial now - presumably they will continue to be beneficial for future employers, and you are ready and willing to discuss how that can benefit them.



                                Resumes are about showcasing your talent in order to get an interview and later, a job. That talent is sometimes part of your current job description, and sometimes not.



                                Use whatever you have to your best advantage.






                                share|improve this answer















                                My question is, is listing these skills that I've developed on a
                                resume appropriate?




                                If you think these skills will be beneficial in your next job, then yes - list them.



                                Since you say "It makes me more effective at work", then you clearly believe these skills are beneficial now - presumably they will continue to be beneficial for future employers, and you are ready and willing to discuss how that can benefit them.



                                Resumes are about showcasing your talent in order to get an interview and later, a job. That talent is sometimes part of your current job description, and sometimes not.



                                Use whatever you have to your best advantage.







                                share|improve this answer














                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer








                                edited Mar 21 '14 at 15:18

























                                answered Mar 20 '14 at 16:05









                                Joe Strazzere

                                224k107661930




                                224k107661930




















                                    up vote
                                    1
                                    down vote













                                    Yes they are, but Use them on your CV when you need to, i.e. Matching a Job Description.



                                    You may get that extra responsibility otherwise.



                                    If you have Python experience and one day your Boss comes around and say's "You know Python don't you? We need you to write some programs" then you think "oh No, I shouldn't have put that on my CV". If you work in a Team, you will be taken out from the loop on Normal work because you are now working on a Project, Your friends in the team will have to cover your Normal Daily work thus creating more work for them and People will start wondering if you ever coming back to the team thus creating tension. And you probably wont get payed any extra cash for doing that and feel angry.



                                    I'm talking from experience, it happened to me once. i work in Computers. Don't get me wrong, i love my work, but sometimes having that extra skill on a CV can backfire for you and your team mates.



                                    People usually Add or Subtract Skills accordingly for each Job they Apply.



                                    If you did a course in Bread Making but your background is Finance then put that down on your CV if you want to get a Job in a Bakery.






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      up vote
                                      1
                                      down vote













                                      Yes they are, but Use them on your CV when you need to, i.e. Matching a Job Description.



                                      You may get that extra responsibility otherwise.



                                      If you have Python experience and one day your Boss comes around and say's "You know Python don't you? We need you to write some programs" then you think "oh No, I shouldn't have put that on my CV". If you work in a Team, you will be taken out from the loop on Normal work because you are now working on a Project, Your friends in the team will have to cover your Normal Daily work thus creating more work for them and People will start wondering if you ever coming back to the team thus creating tension. And you probably wont get payed any extra cash for doing that and feel angry.



                                      I'm talking from experience, it happened to me once. i work in Computers. Don't get me wrong, i love my work, but sometimes having that extra skill on a CV can backfire for you and your team mates.



                                      People usually Add or Subtract Skills accordingly for each Job they Apply.



                                      If you did a course in Bread Making but your background is Finance then put that down on your CV if you want to get a Job in a Bakery.






                                      share|improve this answer
























                                        up vote
                                        1
                                        down vote










                                        up vote
                                        1
                                        down vote









                                        Yes they are, but Use them on your CV when you need to, i.e. Matching a Job Description.



                                        You may get that extra responsibility otherwise.



                                        If you have Python experience and one day your Boss comes around and say's "You know Python don't you? We need you to write some programs" then you think "oh No, I shouldn't have put that on my CV". If you work in a Team, you will be taken out from the loop on Normal work because you are now working on a Project, Your friends in the team will have to cover your Normal Daily work thus creating more work for them and People will start wondering if you ever coming back to the team thus creating tension. And you probably wont get payed any extra cash for doing that and feel angry.



                                        I'm talking from experience, it happened to me once. i work in Computers. Don't get me wrong, i love my work, but sometimes having that extra skill on a CV can backfire for you and your team mates.



                                        People usually Add or Subtract Skills accordingly for each Job they Apply.



                                        If you did a course in Bread Making but your background is Finance then put that down on your CV if you want to get a Job in a Bakery.






                                        share|improve this answer














                                        Yes they are, but Use them on your CV when you need to, i.e. Matching a Job Description.



                                        You may get that extra responsibility otherwise.



                                        If you have Python experience and one day your Boss comes around and say's "You know Python don't you? We need you to write some programs" then you think "oh No, I shouldn't have put that on my CV". If you work in a Team, you will be taken out from the loop on Normal work because you are now working on a Project, Your friends in the team will have to cover your Normal Daily work thus creating more work for them and People will start wondering if you ever coming back to the team thus creating tension. And you probably wont get payed any extra cash for doing that and feel angry.



                                        I'm talking from experience, it happened to me once. i work in Computers. Don't get me wrong, i love my work, but sometimes having that extra skill on a CV can backfire for you and your team mates.



                                        People usually Add or Subtract Skills accordingly for each Job they Apply.



                                        If you did a course in Bread Making but your background is Finance then put that down on your CV if you want to get a Job in a Bakery.







                                        share|improve this answer














                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer








                                        edited Mar 21 '14 at 0:02

























                                        answered Mar 20 '14 at 23:31









                                        Tasos

                                        341110




                                        341110




















                                            up vote
                                            0
                                            down vote













                                            I would say that your skills should affect your day-to-day duties...



                                            Assuming your duties consist of using Excel to analyze actuarial risk -- how does your scripting increase the quality of your analysis? My guess is that some combination of validation, speed, accuracy, (metrics, ideally quantifiable in some way) have improved.



                                            What kind of backend system does your company run? Anything involving SQL queries should be listed. If you import pymongo for anything, then Mongo/NoSQL should appear. If it's just HTML forms automation (the requests and lxml.html modules come in handy here)... whatever it is, list it.



                                            In the end, keep in mind that your resume is read first by a bot, so make use of whatever keywords you work with - "game the system" without making it obvious, and expact interviewers to BS-test you.



                                            Most importantly, drive a hard bargain. If you do it right and know your stuff and are patient you might be worth another $30K+.






                                            share|improve this answer
























                                              up vote
                                              0
                                              down vote













                                              I would say that your skills should affect your day-to-day duties...



                                              Assuming your duties consist of using Excel to analyze actuarial risk -- how does your scripting increase the quality of your analysis? My guess is that some combination of validation, speed, accuracy, (metrics, ideally quantifiable in some way) have improved.



                                              What kind of backend system does your company run? Anything involving SQL queries should be listed. If you import pymongo for anything, then Mongo/NoSQL should appear. If it's just HTML forms automation (the requests and lxml.html modules come in handy here)... whatever it is, list it.



                                              In the end, keep in mind that your resume is read first by a bot, so make use of whatever keywords you work with - "game the system" without making it obvious, and expact interviewers to BS-test you.



                                              Most importantly, drive a hard bargain. If you do it right and know your stuff and are patient you might be worth another $30K+.






                                              share|improve this answer






















                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote










                                                up vote
                                                0
                                                down vote









                                                I would say that your skills should affect your day-to-day duties...



                                                Assuming your duties consist of using Excel to analyze actuarial risk -- how does your scripting increase the quality of your analysis? My guess is that some combination of validation, speed, accuracy, (metrics, ideally quantifiable in some way) have improved.



                                                What kind of backend system does your company run? Anything involving SQL queries should be listed. If you import pymongo for anything, then Mongo/NoSQL should appear. If it's just HTML forms automation (the requests and lxml.html modules come in handy here)... whatever it is, list it.



                                                In the end, keep in mind that your resume is read first by a bot, so make use of whatever keywords you work with - "game the system" without making it obvious, and expact interviewers to BS-test you.



                                                Most importantly, drive a hard bargain. If you do it right and know your stuff and are patient you might be worth another $30K+.






                                                share|improve this answer












                                                I would say that your skills should affect your day-to-day duties...



                                                Assuming your duties consist of using Excel to analyze actuarial risk -- how does your scripting increase the quality of your analysis? My guess is that some combination of validation, speed, accuracy, (metrics, ideally quantifiable in some way) have improved.



                                                What kind of backend system does your company run? Anything involving SQL queries should be listed. If you import pymongo for anything, then Mongo/NoSQL should appear. If it's just HTML forms automation (the requests and lxml.html modules come in handy here)... whatever it is, list it.



                                                In the end, keep in mind that your resume is read first by a bot, so make use of whatever keywords you work with - "game the system" without making it obvious, and expact interviewers to BS-test you.



                                                Most importantly, drive a hard bargain. If you do it right and know your stuff and are patient you might be worth another $30K+.







                                                share|improve this answer












                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer










                                                answered Mar 21 '14 at 3:25









                                                user17635

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