Why are so many job descriptions cut and paste catastrophes?


As employers increasingly complain about the poor quality of job applicants and trouble finding the skills they seek, the implication is that it’s not their fault.

Despite lots of searching and advertising, they just cannot secure the quality of talent and skills they aspire to; they are deluged with low quality applications.

Maybe, just maybe, they should look at their own actions first?

The advertised job description determines who applies. So why when I look at so many job vacancies are they cut and paste catastrophes?



Here’s a post for the position of Senior Marketing Manager I pulled at random today from Linkedin along with my own commentary in italics (with a few key points removed to protect the guilty):

Key Duties & Responsibilities: 
  • Work closely with ******* to identify and promote new opportunities 
  • Work with the web marketing team to develop effective, distributable marketing assets (tools, banners, emails) 
  • Assist affiliate team to identify potential partners willing to host content 
  • Write all required copy including: emails, product copy, press releases and social copy 
  • Update existing material 
  • Work with the design team to produce newsletters and mailings 
Senior Marketing Manager? A Senior Marketing Manager is more erm, senior than a simple Marketing Manager. Whilst they are not the principal owner of the marketing strategy (that of course is the remit of the Marketing Director) I would expect to see at least some mention of the word ‘strategy’ in this JD.

What about leadership? Nope. This is a hands-on, get the work done role. The only action verb here beyond the hands-on stuff is “Assist affiliate team…”

The reality is that this position is mainly about content production – writing copy, a bit of design work, and developing media distribution channels.


It’s not a Senior Marketing Manager position. It’s not even a Marketing Manager role. It’s a junior marketing  job.

Desired Skills and Experience

Essential

  • Degree (or relevant experience) 
  • Excellent computer competency 
  • A versatile portfolio showing experience with a range of clients 
  • At least 3 year’s copywriting experience 
  • Strong problem‐solving skills 
  • Excellent written communication skills 
  • Ability to effectively manage own workload and perform under pressure 
  • Quick to learn and adapt to new challenges 
  • Highly organised and reliable 
My diagnosis is borne out by this section. The only job specific essential requirement is 3 years copy-writing experience. The rest is more or less generic (I'm being polite - it's a cut and paste isn't it?). So with 3 years copy-writing experience do you suddenly have the necessary skills to be a Senior Marketing Manager? I'm sorry to disappoint the person that is hired for this job, but you've not become a Senior Marketing Manager...

Okay. So let’s look at the requirements that an absolutely great candidate will also possess:


Desired 

  • Marketing based degree 
  • Knowledge of (our) products and services 
  • Understanding of affiliate platforms and tracking 
  • Experience of measuring the success of your writing and PR (for example through Google Analytics, A/B testing and campaign metrics) is extremely desirable 
Studied Marketing at university? Great. Tick that box. Unfortunately if you did that and then spent the next 3 years writing copy, the stuff you studied at university was probably written no later than about 2008 – when Twitter was just one year old and still in its infancy. See my point? The speed of marketing communications development is so fast today that even if you graduated as recently as 2010, most of what you studied has already been overtaken by subsequent media and marketing developments.

I’d expect a Senior Marketing Manager candidate to have experience of things like:
  • Acquiring and disseminating customer, competitor and market insights 
  • Product/service development and positioning 
  • Promotional strategy development and implementation
  • Experience of managing specialist external suppliers 
Nothing even remotely resembling this appears anywhere in this job description.

Nowhere in this JD is anything mentioned about goals and outcomes. Things like growing market share, enhancing product/service quality, monitoring and helping respond to competitor and market movements. A Senior Marketing Manager should be tasked with delivering marketing accomplishments. So an applicant that has a stellar record of such achievements won’t necessarily even get considered for this job.

A Senior Marketing Manager spends their time making their employer more competitive, more attractive to its customers, more profitable. Not writing copy and pushing it out to anyone who’ll take it.

I'm pretty confident that this vacancy will attract plenty of under-qualified applicants and very few great ones, simply because the best candidates will be entirely uninspired by the job description.

No salary or benefits information is given for this role. If this had been present, then at least the true nature of the job and whom it would suit would be clearer than the inflated job title infers. And it would demonstrate that the firm was being transparent about what was on offer.

Instead readers are just left with a sneaky feeling that the pay package will be disappointing or at best subject to fierce negotiation.

I’m left with the distinct impression that this firm’s ideas about marketing are all mixed up…and that their HR people probably need to skill up too…

Am I being fair, or is this just a unwarranted rant?





8 comments:

  1. Fantastic post, Neil. I shall be sharing this.

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    1. Thank you Mitch. Great to see you here. Let's hope in however small a way we can make some people think a bit more before they fall into this trap...

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    1. Thanks Katrina! Your posts have been pretty awesome too lately! Maybe Christmas this year was more inspiring than I at first thought! ;-)

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  3. Great post Neil,
    Absolutely agree with you. It's a problem that we have been thinking about a lot as the large majority of companies and hiring managers don't do themselves justice when composing their job descriptions.
    It's definitely a missed opportunity to not only attract good candidates but also enhance the company's employer brand in the process.
    We're dealing more at the junior end of the market but at every level it's an important thing to get right. A well composed JD helps the candidates make a more informed decision about whether they're a good fit for the role or not and hence higher quality / better suited applicants.

    What do you think the solution is to get hiring managers creating better JD's?

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    1. Thanks for providing your insights and reflections Andy. It doesn't seem to me to be a particularly difficult problem to solve. You don't even need a superstar HR Director to do it. Just a Q+A template for HR to apply where they answer key questions about the role. Ask the right questions and you'll get more or less the right answers I reckon. Seems like an easy, low cost, quick win to me. Ooops cliche alert...;-)

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    2. I think you're right - that's a good suggestion.
      Thanks for sharing.

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