The Power (and Peril) of Job Titles

Jobscan analyzed 2.5 million job applications and found something that stopped me COLD. 🥶

Candidates whose resume title MATCHED the target job listing had a *10.6X* higher interview rate.

Not 10% higher. Not 2x higher. 10.6 times. 🤯

Which means that arbitrary label your last employer gave you might be the single BIGGEST thing standing between you and an interview.

Here's the thing though: You can't just change it. That's lying, and it will catch up with you.

But there's a completely legitimate fix that most people don't know about:

👉 You can add a title to the very top of a resume - right under the name, just like a LinkedIn headline. That's where the match happens. The real job titles stay exactly where they are in each experience entry below.

So if your last boss called you a "Communications Staffer" - but you spent three years pitching media, owning the messaging strategy, and running full campaigns - you can safely headline your resume as "PR Manager." Because that's what you were actually doing.

💡 The label was wrong, not the work.

The ethical test is simple: Did you actually do the work? Can you back it up with real stories? Would your manager agree your scope matched that level?

If yes to all three - this isn't spin. It's translation.