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Regardless his question is still valid.As the OP talked about a VP I wonder if he is talking about the US not UK
No. Your experience and skills and how you present yourself in your CV and interview will get you the job. Not because you call yourself Head of Whatever.
@Dannydee - can I ask how old you are?
There's clearly no relevance between those two roles?
Entitled to your opinion.The job market is like a giant iceberg you just see the tip and be chasing for those, the real cream lies below the service and comes from word of mouth and personal introductions they don't care about your title
It’s customary to describe the position you held rather than the internal title.It's customary to label the position you hold before listing off skills. Most people assessing CVs don't have time to go back and re-read and try to figure out if you're an intern or middle-management.
It’s customary to describe the position you held rather than the internal title.
Eg: Head of Marketing is your job. The job title in the company could be “Senior Business Promotion and Development Manager”
I mentioned VP and they all laughed.
Which brings us back to your question @Dannydee. You can call yourself anything you want. The job title doesn't matter. You then reword that title on your CV so it aligns with the post for which you are applying.
US company mmmm......... keep those feelers out there and your networking current is my advice
No. I just describe my job the way you did in your opening post.I find it amusing how some people think your job title is not important in any way.
If someone asks you what job is or what position you hold, do you just list off a bunch of keywords the way you would on your CV?
If that works for you, use it. But I’d never put it on a CV. Makes you sound like a secretary.Fair enough. You know what? The only job title I want is:
"Assistant to the regional manager"
Just seems unusual to describe your job when you could clearly indicate your role in one pop.No. I just describe my job the way you did in your opening post.
Ah, so there is some element of snobbery. Is VP not a valid position? Are we allowed to have CTO's or COO's these days or do we just put "I'm in charge of the technology stuff" on our profile?They laughed about VP because it’s a US thing. They like to call anything the VP of whatever.
Except you don’t have a role that can be clearly defined.Just seems unusual to describe your job when you could clearly indicate your role in one pop.
I watched the UK series. A much better parody.Ah, you didn't get the joke.
IYKYK (meaning if you watched the office, you'd have got it).
Except you don’t have a role that can be clearly defined.
I was a Senior Technical Author at one company. But I also did quality audits and looked after the company database and did H&S training. It’s often the case that you can’t give someone a simple job title.
If I’d been applying for an auditors role putting technical author on my CV would be pointless. Which is why you tailor your CV for each application.
I watched the UK series. A much better parody.
Its better coz there is more of it? Is that really your argument?Aside from that, my view is that there is no comparison. The US version absolutely smashes the UK version. The UK version was funny, and I enjoyed it, but it is a measly 13 episodes (two 6-part series and a Christmas special) and the US version is over 200 episodes. Based on quantity alone, the UK version simply can't compete with the US version. Overall the content, writing, and comedy are of much higher standard than the UK version. Again, part of this is due to quantity. With 200+ episodes, the opportunity to become greater than the UK version was inevitable.
Its better coz there is more of it? Is that really your argument?
Presumably this means that Coronation Street is the program on TV ever as its run to over 11,000 episodes?
Its been played more than 11,000 times over 60 years, following the logic of shows evolving it should be the sweetest sound known to man by now.the coronation street theme tune is the most depressing sound in existence.
Its been played more than 11,000 times over 60 years, following the logic of shows evolving it should be the sweetest sound known to man by now.
The few episodes I have watched didn’t endear me to the series. So I stopped.If you watched it, you'd see for yourself.
There are hundreds of programmes I’ve missed out on over the years. It’s not something I’m going to get stressed over.By giving up without giving it a chance (more than a few episodes) you have really missed out
By giving up without giving it a chance (more than a few episodes) you have really missed out
Well, it's not to me, and that's all that matters.