Is there a neater or alternative way of saying “fully qualified”?

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I'm a consultant who focuses on a particular vendor's technology. I've worked very hard to pass every single exam that the vendor publishes, and I'd like to show this off without sounding too cocky.



"Fully qualified" doesn't seem to have quite the right feel to it and feels more like a euphemism to say, "I have enough qualifications," rather than "I have all the qualifications."



Am I over thinking this? Is there an alternative phrase I could use?







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  • 2




    Yes, you're overthinking this. Fully Qualified is fine. Now go get the job.
    – NotMe
    Feb 4 '15 at 20:56






  • 9




    Picking nits, here, but I would use "Fully certified" in this instance. Certifications are specific. Qualified is, in some cases, subjective. Local cultural influences may color this, too.
    – Wesley Long
    Feb 4 '15 at 21:17
















up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1












I'm a consultant who focuses on a particular vendor's technology. I've worked very hard to pass every single exam that the vendor publishes, and I'd like to show this off without sounding too cocky.



"Fully qualified" doesn't seem to have quite the right feel to it and feels more like a euphemism to say, "I have enough qualifications," rather than "I have all the qualifications."



Am I over thinking this? Is there an alternative phrase I could use?







share|improve this question


















  • 2




    Yes, you're overthinking this. Fully Qualified is fine. Now go get the job.
    – NotMe
    Feb 4 '15 at 20:56






  • 9




    Picking nits, here, but I would use "Fully certified" in this instance. Certifications are specific. Qualified is, in some cases, subjective. Local cultural influences may color this, too.
    – Wesley Long
    Feb 4 '15 at 21:17












up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
2
down vote

favorite
1






1





I'm a consultant who focuses on a particular vendor's technology. I've worked very hard to pass every single exam that the vendor publishes, and I'd like to show this off without sounding too cocky.



"Fully qualified" doesn't seem to have quite the right feel to it and feels more like a euphemism to say, "I have enough qualifications," rather than "I have all the qualifications."



Am I over thinking this? Is there an alternative phrase I could use?







share|improve this question














I'm a consultant who focuses on a particular vendor's technology. I've worked very hard to pass every single exam that the vendor publishes, and I'd like to show this off without sounding too cocky.



"Fully qualified" doesn't seem to have quite the right feel to it and feels more like a euphemism to say, "I have enough qualifications," rather than "I have all the qualifications."



Am I over thinking this? Is there an alternative phrase I could use?









share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 4 '15 at 21:17









Wesley Long

44.7k15100159




44.7k15100159










asked Feb 4 '15 at 20:53









Dan

8,74133636




8,74133636







  • 2




    Yes, you're overthinking this. Fully Qualified is fine. Now go get the job.
    – NotMe
    Feb 4 '15 at 20:56






  • 9




    Picking nits, here, but I would use "Fully certified" in this instance. Certifications are specific. Qualified is, in some cases, subjective. Local cultural influences may color this, too.
    – Wesley Long
    Feb 4 '15 at 21:17












  • 2




    Yes, you're overthinking this. Fully Qualified is fine. Now go get the job.
    – NotMe
    Feb 4 '15 at 20:56






  • 9




    Picking nits, here, but I would use "Fully certified" in this instance. Certifications are specific. Qualified is, in some cases, subjective. Local cultural influences may color this, too.
    – Wesley Long
    Feb 4 '15 at 21:17







2




2




Yes, you're overthinking this. Fully Qualified is fine. Now go get the job.
– NotMe
Feb 4 '15 at 20:56




Yes, you're overthinking this. Fully Qualified is fine. Now go get the job.
– NotMe
Feb 4 '15 at 20:56




9




9




Picking nits, here, but I would use "Fully certified" in this instance. Certifications are specific. Qualified is, in some cases, subjective. Local cultural influences may color this, too.
– Wesley Long
Feb 4 '15 at 21:17




Picking nits, here, but I would use "Fully certified" in this instance. Certifications are specific. Qualified is, in some cases, subjective. Local cultural influences may color this, too.
– Wesley Long
Feb 4 '15 at 21:17










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Show, don't tell.



Include something like "Have passed all exams in series" in your resume. further demonstrate your familiarities with the technology by talking about problems you've solved or things you've built using that technology. It's up to them to judge whether you're fully qualified, and they'll do that based on the information they receive about you.






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    up vote
    4
    down vote













    Show, don't tell.



    Include something like "Have passed all exams in series" in your resume. further demonstrate your familiarities with the technology by talking about problems you've solved or things you've built using that technology. It's up to them to judge whether you're fully qualified, and they'll do that based on the information they receive about you.






    share|improve this answer
























      up vote
      4
      down vote













      Show, don't tell.



      Include something like "Have passed all exams in series" in your resume. further demonstrate your familiarities with the technology by talking about problems you've solved or things you've built using that technology. It's up to them to judge whether you're fully qualified, and they'll do that based on the information they receive about you.






      share|improve this answer






















        up vote
        4
        down vote










        up vote
        4
        down vote









        Show, don't tell.



        Include something like "Have passed all exams in series" in your resume. further demonstrate your familiarities with the technology by talking about problems you've solved or things you've built using that technology. It's up to them to judge whether you're fully qualified, and they'll do that based on the information they receive about you.






        share|improve this answer












        Show, don't tell.



        Include something like "Have passed all exams in series" in your resume. further demonstrate your familiarities with the technology by talking about problems you've solved or things you've built using that technology. It's up to them to judge whether you're fully qualified, and they'll do that based on the information they receive about you.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Feb 4 '15 at 21:07









        KatieK

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