Is Your Resume Showing Your Age?

Nancy Anderson
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Like it or not, age does matter in the workplace environment, with many organizations being reluctant to hire older workers, despite their experience. If your resume shows your age, you may need to tweak it in order to improve your chances of getting an interview. Here's what you should and shouldn't do.

Don't List All Your Jobs

When you list all your jobs, you show exactly when you entered the workforce, and this can indicate how old you are. In addition, older workers tend to have experience that is no longer relevant to modern jobs, so most of these jobs are not pertinent anyway. Similarly, most of the skills you gained early in your career are usually covered by your later jobs, so listing early employment is simply redundant.

Don't List Dates

When talking about education, many older workers indicate what year they graduated. Unfortunately, a little bit of math indicates how old they are. Instead, simply state that you graduated and in what field. GPA scores are not normally relevant, and you don't need to show what modules you took. Always use the modern name of the institution rather than the name that it had when you graduated.

Do Be Brief with Your Interests

Your interests may indicate that you're an older worker, so unless your hobbies are highly relevant to the position, be very brief. Don't mention grandchildren or the ages of your children, as this may lead to assumptions about how old you are. Sporting activities may also brand you as a mature person.

Don't Include Obsolete Qualifications

Sometimes, your qualifications may mark you out as someone who is an older contender for a vacant position. For example, in the programming field, it's unusual for young workers to know certain programming languages, such as COBOL. Therefore, stating that you know COBOL may make you stand out as an older worker. Of course, if the job involves COBOL programming, you want to include it.

Exceptions

Naturally, there are some times when you want to be identified as an older worker. Some organizations prioritize hiring veterans, so in this case, you want to be identified as a mature worker. Similarly, with age comes experience, and some businesses prefer middle-aged candidates as accountants, lawyers and administrators as these are people with the most experience. In these cases, it's often important to identify yourself as an older person in order to get the interview.

Getting an interview often means tweaking your resume to match the needs of the company. While more mature applicants have lots to offer, including experience, they may experience some bias at the application review stage. If you are an older worker, take a good look at your resume to make sure it shows you in the best light.


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  • Jose C.
    Jose C.

    I wonder why our government is not doing much against such age discriminating employers

  • Marleny  I.
    Marleny I.

    Excellent!!! Thank you

  • Lou A.
    Lou A.

    I can attest - age discrimination is VERY prevalent. Even though every company states that it is not. My attitude? - it's their loss. The company that wants you for who you are is the one you want to work for. The other companies are just losing out on your experience and work ethic.

  • JoAnn Thomas
    JoAnn Thomas

    Thank u I needed to know that because I am a mature appltcant, putting my dates of start to end is not necessary.

  • Deb B.
    Deb B.

    Both my children recently graduated from college and one class they attended discussed in length how prevalent age discrimination truly is. You want experience you need to hire experienced employees -regardless of age. And on the job experience is not taught, its learned.

  • Patricia K.
    Patricia K.

    Hello, everyone. I've been out of and looking for work now for 15 months now and have had NO luck at all. I am that mature worker at 68, but desperately need to have an income to manage. I have excellent computer/office skills and a pleasant personality. There is one institution I've applied to several times, and in their online app it comes right out and asks your age and birth date! They also want you DL #. They say the age and birth date is necessary for a background and credit check (although the jobs being applied to have nothing to do with money). If you don't complete the required information you are not able to go further in the app. I think it is totally wrong and discriminatory. I believe this information should not be requested/required until after being offered a position. This, by-the-way, is a well known University hospital in the area. Some older workers also need to work to survive, as do I as a victim of life's circumstances not in my control.

  • Don B.
    Don B.

    Age discrimination is the rule, not the exception, in tech fields. Unless you are applying for a management position, there is no advantage in volunteering any information that indicates you have over 20 years of experience. Cut off your job history after the most recent 10 or 15 years. Say "Info on previous experience available on request." There are exceptions, of course, but if you make it obvious to a tech recruiter that you are over 45, you are doing yourself a disservice.

  • JERRY PIOTROWSKI
    JERRY PIOTROWSKI

    I am 95 ,shall steel looking for work?

  • Robert B.
    Robert B.

    I am 49 should remove dates ? I do not want to remove jobs as I fell they are pertinent help?

  • Carole Walker
    Carole Walker

    When I read this I had to laugh. The only jobs available to those 50-60 are in your home office where clients appreciate 30 years of amazing and successful experience!

  • Carl A.
    Carl A.

    All great points. My resume indicates 30 year's experience in the Tool & Die trade, yet I am only 52 years old. I still have 20 years before retirement. Doesn't seem right, but I will remove my years of experience to test this theory.

  • Jill V.
    Jill V.

    And as to not going back more than 10 years: I worked in a

  • Jill V.
    Jill V.

    Applications ask for high school graduation date.(In my case, 1970). So am I supposed to leave it blank or enter a fake date?!

  • Sunil D.
    Sunil D.

    Why experts like you are IGNORANT about the industry when asking for age related questions. Most of the people ask for clean driving record and ask for DRiver;s License Number. And Majority of the people don't know the fact that your year of birth is embedded in your driver's license number

  • Linda S.
    Linda S.

    To the author: this is SO wrong! How old are you anyway? Companies want dates and they check them. Yeah, we're old, but isn't that what Beyond.com is all about? Finding jobs for OLD people? Geez.

  • Richard D.
    Richard D.

    When can we make it an actionable offense to litigate for demanding information that can reveal age? I have friends in their forties now getting discriminated against...I'm in my late 50s..forget it. If the corps want socialism, bring it and so be it, you are forcing me into it.

  • RANDALL B.
    RANDALL B.

    I have to completely agree with @Kelly K. At least 90% of the application systems require dates and GPA, across multiple fields and industries. To Nancy's response, you may be able to get "creative" with your resume, but a majority of companies only parse that information, requiring a candidate to additionally input very specific information. If you don't provide dates you either can't move forward in the application or are immediately rejected by the system. It's one thing to properly vet a candidate, but quite another to make the process needlessly cumbersome and discriminatory. I can easily remember college GPA, and am proud of it, but for those of us out of high school 25+ years, who remembers that HS GPA, if the high school even used that grading system back then?

  • Joann P.
    Joann P.

    Kelly K, you are so correct re: GPA. Let's also add that a company/Academia/etc., has to follow EEO requirements, posting requirements, interview requirements by the governement as they have to report this information if they have more than X amt of employees (don't know the number but Google is your friend). So many times a job that is posted is already relegated to a candidate and you are just part of an interview process that the government requires, hence you are not getting the job. And this is something that has been going on for decades, before technology. Sorry, triggered a nerve, but GTG cuz I had to start my own business and I am 60+ and proud. Go Entrepeneurs.

  • Joann P.
    Joann P.

    you know I did everything you said and only put about 10 years of experienve and know what happened????? There is Google, or when you walk in that door, they see your age and believe me the glassy eye look comes over their faces. I am in technology so my years of experience are absolutely relevant. Face the facts, age descrimination is alive and kicking and I hate to say it but the old adage "it's not what you know it's who you know" however one must have hope and then just start their own business - this country needs Entrepeneurs and that's ageless.

  • Washington S Lee
    Washington S Lee

    A real disconnect, that's what the discussion here is revealing. That people placed in charge of recruiting what should represent the BEST talent available, it's mind boggling to discover them suggesting that the best approach to job prospecting is through lying.

  • KELLY K.
    KELLY K.

    Nancy -- please be aware that employers everywhere are asking for GPAs AND graduation dates. Some employers even make these fields mandatory in the job application databases. A headhunter I worked with told me that not answering these fields is a tip off that your GPA is below 3.0 and that you have something to hide with your graduation date (eg you are flagging that you are an older candidate). These are not employers in the education sector or in any particular sector. People who are not job hunting themselves really don't have any idea of what employers are really doing with their job app systems. I suggest you take a spin through 5-10 of them yourself. Just don't press submit at the end. Enjoy!

  • Nancy Anderson
    Nancy Anderson

    Thanks for your comments. @Randall the article was written by the US job market as well as job markets all over. Today you can get really creative with a resume. You could tell a story instead of listing down your employment history, tasks and dates. Most employers will not ask for your GPA unless maybe you are applying for a position within the education system. Sometimes interests and hobbies are asked for. For example I had looked at a job posting just a few days ago that was for a creative writer. One of the things they asked for is to tell them what you do when you aren't working which would bring up interests and hobbies. Some dates you can't fudge. But if you can get away without inputting them, do so. In addition, the rule of thumb for a resume is to only include the last ten years of employment, etc. So, if I graduated from graduate school in 2000, I wouldn't input a date for it on my resume because it's more than 10 years. Hope this helps.

  • Kenneth K.
    Kenneth K.

    Age discrimination happens all the time.

  • RANDALL B.
    RANDALL B.

    I have to assume this article wasn't intended for the U.S. Job market. Most job postings require dates of employment, dates and GPA's for education, and lastly, interests are almost never included in a U.S. resume, and would be seen as bad form in most circumstances.

  • Greg DiStefano
    Greg DiStefano

    Sounds like age discrimination to me ,I guess you have to be a certain minority or illegal to aide step discrimination .

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