Why Most Job Descriptions Are Killing Your Brand

Job descriptions are often the first impression candidates have of your company. Yet, most are boring, vague, or outright repellent—scaring away top talent while attracting the wrong applicants. Here’s what’s broken and how to write job posts that actually build your employer brand.


The 5 Deadly Sins of Job Descriptions

1. The “Laundry List” Syndrome

Problem: A 20-point bullet list of “must-have” skills (e.g., *”10+ years in Kubernetes, PhD in AI, fluent in 5 programming languages”*).
Why It Fails:

  • Deters qualified candidates who don’t tick every box (especially women and diverse applicants).
  • Encourages “resume bots” who keyword-stuff but lack real expertise.

Fix: Lead with 3-5 true must-haves and label the rest as “bonus skills.”

2. The “We Want a Unicorn” Trap

Problem: Mixing wildly unrelated roles (e.g., “Seeking a DevOps Engineer who also does UX design and digital marketing!”).
Why It Fails: Top talent assumes your team is disorganized or underfunded.

Fix: Split hybrid roles into separate hires or clarify why the combo matters (e.g., “This role focuses on CI/CD pipelines, but you’ll collaborate with designers”).

3. The “Corporate Junk” Language

Problem: Phrases like “synergistic paradigm shifts” or “rockstar ninja wanted.”
Why It Fails: Sounds robotic (or cringey) and fails to reflect your culture.

Fix: Write like humans talk. Example:
❌ “Leverage cross-functional synergies.”
✅ “You’ll work with product and security teams to ship features faster.”

4. The “No Salary Transparency” Red Flag

Problem: Omitting pay ranges or writing “competitive salary.”
Why It Fails:

  • 73% of candidates skip job posts without salary info (LinkedIn).
  • Wastes time for both recruiters and applicants.

Fix: Include a range (e.g., *”$120K–$150K + equity”*) or link to your compensation philosophy.

5. The “Diversity Lip Service” Issue

Problem: Generic EEO statements (“We’re an equal opportunity employer”) with zero proof.
Why It Fails: Diverse talent looks for action, not boilerplate.

Fix: Show, don’t tell. Add:

  • Employee resource group highlights.
  • Flexible work policies (e.g., *”4-day workweeks optional”*).
  • Stats like “40% of our eng team are from underrepresented groups.”
Picture of Author: Pramod Krishnan
Author: Pramod Krishnan

Passionate about technology, innovation, and industry insights, our authors bring you expert perspectives on the latest trends in staffing, recruitment, and business solutions. Stay informed and ahead with our in-depth articles!

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