Is it ethical to put a job title representing the work I actually performed instead of my given title on a resume? [duplicate]

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  • How to label inaccurate job titles on resume

    4 answers



  • Should I describe myself by my current position or my desired position?

    3 answers



I recently received a phone call from the HR department of a company I applied to, who were interested in interviewing me. I was caught off guard however, when the job they wanted to interview me for was a lower level role than the senior one I had applied for. The HR representative explained that looking at my resume it appeared to be the appropriate role. After a brief discussion of my experience, she agreed that the senior role I applied to was in fact the correct position.



This made me realize that my resume is not representing my experience well enough. I believe it relates to job titles. My work experience on my resume reads in brief like so:




Software Developer at Company A



  • lead a small team

Software Programmer at Company B



  • lead a small team

Software Engineer II at Company C



  • lead a small team



None of my "official" job titles have contained the words "Senior" or "Lead", but I make it very clear when I describe my experience that my position was a more senior one. I am now under the impression that HR departments may skim over job titles to perform a quick screen rather than to bother reading the details.



Is it ethical for me to change my job titles on my resume to more accurately present my experience?







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marked as duplicate by Justin Cave, gnat, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, IDrinkandIKnowThings Jun 24 '14 at 13:53


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/122/… and workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/13494/…
    – David K
    Jun 23 '14 at 16:55











  • The HR person gave no feedback if she was mislead by job titles or something else?
    – user8365
    Jun 24 '14 at 0:28
















up vote
4
down vote

favorite













This question already has an answer here:



  • How to label inaccurate job titles on resume

    4 answers



  • Should I describe myself by my current position or my desired position?

    3 answers



I recently received a phone call from the HR department of a company I applied to, who were interested in interviewing me. I was caught off guard however, when the job they wanted to interview me for was a lower level role than the senior one I had applied for. The HR representative explained that looking at my resume it appeared to be the appropriate role. After a brief discussion of my experience, she agreed that the senior role I applied to was in fact the correct position.



This made me realize that my resume is not representing my experience well enough. I believe it relates to job titles. My work experience on my resume reads in brief like so:




Software Developer at Company A



  • lead a small team

Software Programmer at Company B



  • lead a small team

Software Engineer II at Company C



  • lead a small team



None of my "official" job titles have contained the words "Senior" or "Lead", but I make it very clear when I describe my experience that my position was a more senior one. I am now under the impression that HR departments may skim over job titles to perform a quick screen rather than to bother reading the details.



Is it ethical for me to change my job titles on my resume to more accurately present my experience?







share|improve this question












marked as duplicate by Justin Cave, gnat, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, IDrinkandIKnowThings Jun 24 '14 at 13:53


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.










  • 1




    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/122/… and workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/13494/…
    – David K
    Jun 23 '14 at 16:55











  • The HR person gave no feedback if she was mislead by job titles or something else?
    – user8365
    Jun 24 '14 at 0:28












up vote
4
down vote

favorite









up vote
4
down vote

favorite












This question already has an answer here:



  • How to label inaccurate job titles on resume

    4 answers



  • Should I describe myself by my current position or my desired position?

    3 answers



I recently received a phone call from the HR department of a company I applied to, who were interested in interviewing me. I was caught off guard however, when the job they wanted to interview me for was a lower level role than the senior one I had applied for. The HR representative explained that looking at my resume it appeared to be the appropriate role. After a brief discussion of my experience, she agreed that the senior role I applied to was in fact the correct position.



This made me realize that my resume is not representing my experience well enough. I believe it relates to job titles. My work experience on my resume reads in brief like so:




Software Developer at Company A



  • lead a small team

Software Programmer at Company B



  • lead a small team

Software Engineer II at Company C



  • lead a small team



None of my "official" job titles have contained the words "Senior" or "Lead", but I make it very clear when I describe my experience that my position was a more senior one. I am now under the impression that HR departments may skim over job titles to perform a quick screen rather than to bother reading the details.



Is it ethical for me to change my job titles on my resume to more accurately present my experience?







share|improve this question













This question already has an answer here:



  • How to label inaccurate job titles on resume

    4 answers



  • Should I describe myself by my current position or my desired position?

    3 answers



I recently received a phone call from the HR department of a company I applied to, who were interested in interviewing me. I was caught off guard however, when the job they wanted to interview me for was a lower level role than the senior one I had applied for. The HR representative explained that looking at my resume it appeared to be the appropriate role. After a brief discussion of my experience, she agreed that the senior role I applied to was in fact the correct position.



This made me realize that my resume is not representing my experience well enough. I believe it relates to job titles. My work experience on my resume reads in brief like so:




Software Developer at Company A



  • lead a small team

Software Programmer at Company B



  • lead a small team

Software Engineer II at Company C



  • lead a small team



None of my "official" job titles have contained the words "Senior" or "Lead", but I make it very clear when I describe my experience that my position was a more senior one. I am now under the impression that HR departments may skim over job titles to perform a quick screen rather than to bother reading the details.



Is it ethical for me to change my job titles on my resume to more accurately present my experience?





This question already has an answer here:



  • How to label inaccurate job titles on resume

    4 answers



  • Should I describe myself by my current position or my desired position?

    3 answers









share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Jun 23 '14 at 16:48









bengoesboom

19111




19111




marked as duplicate by Justin Cave, gnat, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, IDrinkandIKnowThings Jun 24 '14 at 13:53


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by Justin Cave, gnat, jcmeloni, Michael Grubey, IDrinkandIKnowThings Jun 24 '14 at 13:53


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.









  • 1




    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/122/… and workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/13494/…
    – David K
    Jun 23 '14 at 16:55











  • The HR person gave no feedback if she was mislead by job titles or something else?
    – user8365
    Jun 24 '14 at 0:28












  • 1




    Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/122/… and workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/13494/…
    – David K
    Jun 23 '14 at 16:55











  • The HR person gave no feedback if she was mislead by job titles or something else?
    – user8365
    Jun 24 '14 at 0:28







1




1




Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/122/… and workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/13494/…
– David K
Jun 23 '14 at 16:55





Related: workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/122/… and workplace.stackexchange.com/questions/13494/…
– David K
Jun 23 '14 at 16:55













The HR person gave no feedback if she was mislead by job titles or something else?
– user8365
Jun 24 '14 at 0:28




The HR person gave no feedback if she was mislead by job titles or something else?
– user8365
Jun 24 '14 at 0:28










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

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up vote
10
down vote













You have to be careful with this as when they contact the companies you worked for they may tell them a differnt title. What I did was use my offical title and then follow it in () with the real title of the work I was actually doing. I had to do this because my offical title in one company was not even in the same general profession as the actual work. I usually explained this in the cover letter or interview if anyone asked. That got the key words out there for the HR filter and was not lying.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Yes, HR departments use software to do their initial searching/sifting these days. Using the right words is definitely an overall part of your resume-writing strategy.



    I would be cautious when using words like "Senior". It's my impression (which could be false, either in whole or in part) that the Senior programmer/dev/etc. is the one with the most experience on the team, and is responsible for some longer-term/larger project scoping and possibly some mentoring. If you did some of that, AND you have lots of years' experience as the leader of the team, it might fit.



    If you change your title to be something like "Lead, Software Programming Team" that lets people know that you were in a leadership position, you were a main coordinator for day-to-day stuff or weekly scrums, but may or may not fit their internal idea of what a "senior programmer" is in terms of length of experience and/or project management. If you do change your job titles, be sure to include in your description that you actually did do some hands-on coding (if you did.)






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Ideally (but not always) anyone reviewing your resume should be looking at the work description and not just titles. Since an HR person is looking at your resume, it would seem you got past any buzzword filter. I would guess that your description of your work over the phone gave a better picture of what you have been doing than your resume did.



      Titles change from company to company and really have no correlation. Even if you had "Senior" in your title, senior means different things to different companies. FWIW, if you just looked at my 25 year job history by title only, it would approximate a sine wave of responsibility. That has never been a problem for me in looking for a job.



      I would stay away from mis-representing simple verifiable facts like job title, this could really blow up on you. For my company, that is one of the few things that would actually be verified if someone in HR called for a reference.






      share|improve this answer



























        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes








        up vote
        10
        down vote













        You have to be careful with this as when they contact the companies you worked for they may tell them a differnt title. What I did was use my offical title and then follow it in () with the real title of the work I was actually doing. I had to do this because my offical title in one company was not even in the same general profession as the actual work. I usually explained this in the cover letter or interview if anyone asked. That got the key words out there for the HR filter and was not lying.






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          10
          down vote













          You have to be careful with this as when they contact the companies you worked for they may tell them a differnt title. What I did was use my offical title and then follow it in () with the real title of the work I was actually doing. I had to do this because my offical title in one company was not even in the same general profession as the actual work. I usually explained this in the cover letter or interview if anyone asked. That got the key words out there for the HR filter and was not lying.






          share|improve this answer






















            up vote
            10
            down vote










            up vote
            10
            down vote









            You have to be careful with this as when they contact the companies you worked for they may tell them a differnt title. What I did was use my offical title and then follow it in () with the real title of the work I was actually doing. I had to do this because my offical title in one company was not even in the same general profession as the actual work. I usually explained this in the cover letter or interview if anyone asked. That got the key words out there for the HR filter and was not lying.






            share|improve this answer












            You have to be careful with this as when they contact the companies you worked for they may tell them a differnt title. What I did was use my offical title and then follow it in () with the real title of the work I was actually doing. I had to do this because my offical title in one company was not even in the same general profession as the actual work. I usually explained this in the cover letter or interview if anyone asked. That got the key words out there for the HR filter and was not lying.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jun 23 '14 at 17:12









            HLGEM

            133k25226489




            133k25226489






















                up vote
                1
                down vote













                Yes, HR departments use software to do their initial searching/sifting these days. Using the right words is definitely an overall part of your resume-writing strategy.



                I would be cautious when using words like "Senior". It's my impression (which could be false, either in whole or in part) that the Senior programmer/dev/etc. is the one with the most experience on the team, and is responsible for some longer-term/larger project scoping and possibly some mentoring. If you did some of that, AND you have lots of years' experience as the leader of the team, it might fit.



                If you change your title to be something like "Lead, Software Programming Team" that lets people know that you were in a leadership position, you were a main coordinator for day-to-day stuff or weekly scrums, but may or may not fit their internal idea of what a "senior programmer" is in terms of length of experience and/or project management. If you do change your job titles, be sure to include in your description that you actually did do some hands-on coding (if you did.)






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote













                  Yes, HR departments use software to do their initial searching/sifting these days. Using the right words is definitely an overall part of your resume-writing strategy.



                  I would be cautious when using words like "Senior". It's my impression (which could be false, either in whole or in part) that the Senior programmer/dev/etc. is the one with the most experience on the team, and is responsible for some longer-term/larger project scoping and possibly some mentoring. If you did some of that, AND you have lots of years' experience as the leader of the team, it might fit.



                  If you change your title to be something like "Lead, Software Programming Team" that lets people know that you were in a leadership position, you were a main coordinator for day-to-day stuff or weekly scrums, but may or may not fit their internal idea of what a "senior programmer" is in terms of length of experience and/or project management. If you do change your job titles, be sure to include in your description that you actually did do some hands-on coding (if you did.)






                  share|improve this answer






















                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote









                    Yes, HR departments use software to do their initial searching/sifting these days. Using the right words is definitely an overall part of your resume-writing strategy.



                    I would be cautious when using words like "Senior". It's my impression (which could be false, either in whole or in part) that the Senior programmer/dev/etc. is the one with the most experience on the team, and is responsible for some longer-term/larger project scoping and possibly some mentoring. If you did some of that, AND you have lots of years' experience as the leader of the team, it might fit.



                    If you change your title to be something like "Lead, Software Programming Team" that lets people know that you were in a leadership position, you were a main coordinator for day-to-day stuff or weekly scrums, but may or may not fit their internal idea of what a "senior programmer" is in terms of length of experience and/or project management. If you do change your job titles, be sure to include in your description that you actually did do some hands-on coding (if you did.)






                    share|improve this answer












                    Yes, HR departments use software to do their initial searching/sifting these days. Using the right words is definitely an overall part of your resume-writing strategy.



                    I would be cautious when using words like "Senior". It's my impression (which could be false, either in whole or in part) that the Senior programmer/dev/etc. is the one with the most experience on the team, and is responsible for some longer-term/larger project scoping and possibly some mentoring. If you did some of that, AND you have lots of years' experience as the leader of the team, it might fit.



                    If you change your title to be something like "Lead, Software Programming Team" that lets people know that you were in a leadership position, you were a main coordinator for day-to-day stuff or weekly scrums, but may or may not fit their internal idea of what a "senior programmer" is in terms of length of experience and/or project management. If you do change your job titles, be sure to include in your description that you actually did do some hands-on coding (if you did.)







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Jun 24 '14 at 0:04







                    user22432



























                        up vote
                        0
                        down vote













                        Ideally (but not always) anyone reviewing your resume should be looking at the work description and not just titles. Since an HR person is looking at your resume, it would seem you got past any buzzword filter. I would guess that your description of your work over the phone gave a better picture of what you have been doing than your resume did.



                        Titles change from company to company and really have no correlation. Even if you had "Senior" in your title, senior means different things to different companies. FWIW, if you just looked at my 25 year job history by title only, it would approximate a sine wave of responsibility. That has never been a problem for me in looking for a job.



                        I would stay away from mis-representing simple verifiable facts like job title, this could really blow up on you. For my company, that is one of the few things that would actually be verified if someone in HR called for a reference.






                        share|improve this answer
























                          up vote
                          0
                          down vote













                          Ideally (but not always) anyone reviewing your resume should be looking at the work description and not just titles. Since an HR person is looking at your resume, it would seem you got past any buzzword filter. I would guess that your description of your work over the phone gave a better picture of what you have been doing than your resume did.



                          Titles change from company to company and really have no correlation. Even if you had "Senior" in your title, senior means different things to different companies. FWIW, if you just looked at my 25 year job history by title only, it would approximate a sine wave of responsibility. That has never been a problem for me in looking for a job.



                          I would stay away from mis-representing simple verifiable facts like job title, this could really blow up on you. For my company, that is one of the few things that would actually be verified if someone in HR called for a reference.






                          share|improve this answer






















                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            0
                            down vote









                            Ideally (but not always) anyone reviewing your resume should be looking at the work description and not just titles. Since an HR person is looking at your resume, it would seem you got past any buzzword filter. I would guess that your description of your work over the phone gave a better picture of what you have been doing than your resume did.



                            Titles change from company to company and really have no correlation. Even if you had "Senior" in your title, senior means different things to different companies. FWIW, if you just looked at my 25 year job history by title only, it would approximate a sine wave of responsibility. That has never been a problem for me in looking for a job.



                            I would stay away from mis-representing simple verifiable facts like job title, this could really blow up on you. For my company, that is one of the few things that would actually be verified if someone in HR called for a reference.






                            share|improve this answer












                            Ideally (but not always) anyone reviewing your resume should be looking at the work description and not just titles. Since an HR person is looking at your resume, it would seem you got past any buzzword filter. I would guess that your description of your work over the phone gave a better picture of what you have been doing than your resume did.



                            Titles change from company to company and really have no correlation. Even if you had "Senior" in your title, senior means different things to different companies. FWIW, if you just looked at my 25 year job history by title only, it would approximate a sine wave of responsibility. That has never been a problem for me in looking for a job.



                            I would stay away from mis-representing simple verifiable facts like job title, this could really blow up on you. For my company, that is one of the few things that would actually be verified if someone in HR called for a reference.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jun 23 '14 at 17:54









                            cdkMoose

                            9,29822042




                            9,29822042












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