8 Ways You Should Never Describe Yourself In A Job Application

Job applications are often your one and only chance to impress a potential employer.
Make sure that the words you use to represent yourself as a candidate for a job aren’t costing you success and that your resume and cover letter paint you in the best possible light.
BE CAREFUL HOW YOU LABEL YOURSELF
There’s a common theory that it takes around 10,000 hours of practice in one particular field for someone to become an expert in that topic or skill. Before you dub yourself an expert in anything when writing your resume, take a minute to consider whether you really have reached expert status when it comes to that particular topic.
Would other people consider you to be an expert? Or are you simply describing something you happen to be interested in, or enjoy doing? Use terms of authority sparingly if you don’t have the experience to back them up.
USE EXAMPLES TO BACK UP YOUR CLAIMS
Once you’ve described yourself as an ideas person, a recruiter or hiring manager is going to expect you to be able to back up that claim. So if your heart is set on describing yourself as a creative person, you had better have some examples of specific circumstances when you’ve used creativity in the workplace.
Make your self-professed creativity tangible to an employer, and demonstrate ways that your creative flair has made a positive difference to the way you work, or given you an idea that has benefitted your team.
REMEMBER, NOBODY’S PERFECT
Most people have to be organised to a certain degree, to get their work done and to operate efficiently at work and in life. When you tell a potential employer that you’re organised, are you setting up a false expectation that you are more organised than any other candidate?
Before you describe yourself as organised, make sure that you can live up to the image of perfectly labelled and filed documents, neatly formatted spreadsheets, and precision timetabling.
DON’T USE OVER-THE-TOP LANGUAGE
Are you extremely passionate, and exceedingly enthusiastic, and very diligent about your work? Great! But using these types of words to quantify how excited you are and how much you want this job might not work in your favour. Using words like ‘extremely’ might make you seem a little too keen, or over-excited.
LET YOUR ACHIEVEMENTS SPEAK FOR YOU
Most potential employers will be able to recognise your ambition in the way that you present yourself in your CV and at an interview. Being ambitious is a great quality, it means that you’re excited to strive for great achievements.
Let your achievements and successes spell out your ambition for you. You don’t need to remind everyone of how successful you want to be, and that you’ll do anything to be competitive. You might accidentally come across as being a bit narcissistic, or potentially too focused on working towards your own success rather than that of the team or the broader business.
SHOW MATURITY AND RESTRAINT
Young people can be keen to show off their effervescent personality. They’re fresh in the workplace, and everything is new and exciting. It can be a lot of fun getting to meet new people and experience the business world for the first time, and you want your potential employer to know how excited you will be to work in an office and to create your networks.
Be careful not to make yourself sound as though your youth makes you ditzy or giddy. If you’re a friendly and easy-to-get-along-with kind of person, it will show through the way that you interact with an interviewer and their colleagues. There’s no need to spell that out for them in your application and risk sounding unnecessarily like an ‘air-head’.
AVOID WORDS THAT SOUND PRETENTIOUS
Some words just seem a little pretentious or arrogant. Words like ‘guru’ or ‘master’ are amongst them. Try to avoid using terms to represent your work experience that you could use to describe the character of ‘Mr Miyagi’ in the movie ‘Karate Kid’.
BE AUTHENTIC. BE PREPARED.
The worst way to represent yourself in a job application is not actually a word – it’s by not describing yourself at all. If an interviewer asks you to describe yourself, it is definitely better to have something prepared than to say “I don’t know”. Have something modest and accurate to say. It is vital that you describe your best skills and personality traits – but don’t toot your own horn too loudly.
Remember – this isn’t a definitive guide. We’re not saying that these terms won’t be received in a purely positive way if you use them. But we hope this inspires you to think outside the box a little when you’re next describing yourself in a resume.
Need more job application tips and tricks from the best accounting, finance and banking recruiters in the bizz? Have a chat to the team at Consult today about your next career move!
Consult Recruitment
Recent Posts
Retention in 2026: What actually keeps people engaged?
Celebrating B Corp Month at Consult
Fix in ‘26 – Economic Outlook Insights with Jarrod Kerr,…
Ultimate jobseeker guides
End of 2025 Market Update
Leading people in an AI world – AI & Leadership…
Celebrating New Zealand’s 2025 Best Places to Work
Finding roles in the hidden job market
Blog categories
Our latest blog posts.

Retention in 2026: What actually keeps people engaged?
Our recent Summer 2026 What the Buck? market survey shows professionals are feeling more confident than last year. That doesn’t

Celebrating B Corp Month at Consult
March is B Corp Month and for us at Consult, that means celebrating being two years into our B Corp

Fix in ‘26 – Economic Outlook Insights with Jarrod Kerr, Kiwibank Chief Economist
This article was published with our partners, LEAD Executive Search. It’s always great to have Jarrod back in our office
Hiring or job hunting? You’ll want this.
Get our latest What the Buck? Market Snapshot & Salary Report.
What the Buck? is proprietary research we run once a year. It’s fresh, NZ-specific and built to help businesses and professionals understand the job market and make better hiring and career decisions.