It would be better to have the title.
by URwhatUR (2019-09-22 09:11:30)
Edited on 2019-09-22 09:11:44

In reply to: Title / resume question  posted by OCND


If you haven't done so yet, present the facts about your proven success in the role and request the title to match. Now that he knows you can perform at that level, he should be ok matching the title to the responsibilities. While I may not be motivated by titles personally, they do position people in the minds of clients, vendors, and industry when pitching, serving, negotiating.

Do not lie on the resume. Instead, say something like, "Directs the blah blah team in serving blah blah, an increase of blah blah since blah."

Good luck!


A tip on asking for the title you deserve
by CulliganMan  (2019-09-23 12:05:06)     cannot delete  |  Edit  |  Return to Board  |  Ignore Poster   |   Highlight Poster  |   Reply to Post

My wife went through this not too long ago. All of the incentives and responsibilities were at a level higher than her job title. HR manager would always fall back on "We pay you well. Why do you need a title change unless you are intending to leave?"

Her response was that, internally, she does not get the respect and trust from her colleagues (specifically those that are not in her direct group) that should come along with the better title, and it makes it more difficult to get things done. Externally, people are receiving communications from a more junior employee than a relationship as important as their's calls for, and it could hurt the business.

She's not looking to leave, and everything she said was true. She got the better title in the next round of promotions.

I guess the tip is to look for non-pay related reasons for a better title and highlight those to the people making the decision. Best to be proactive on stuff like this so when it does come time to look elsewhere, all of the pieces are in place.

Good Luck!