Recruitment
5 Common Mistakes in Job Descriptions (And How to Fix Them)

Introduction The job description (JD) is often the very first interaction a potential candidate has with your company. Yet, so many businesses treat it as an afterthought. A poorly written JD can deter top talent before they even click “Apply.”
The Mistakes to Avoid
- The “Unicorn” Wishlist: Listing 15 “required” skills when only 5 are actually necessary scares away qualified candidates who suffer from imposter syndrome.
- Fix: Separate “Must-haves” from “Nice-to-haves.”
- Vague Job Titles: Titles like “Marketing Ninja” or “Code Wizard” might sound fun, but they hurt SEO and confuse candidates about the actual seniority of the role.
- Fix: Stick to industry-standard titles like “Senior Marketing Manager.”
- ** ignoring Company Culture:** A dry list of duties tells a candidate nothing about what it’s like to work there.
- Fix: Dedicate a section to your values, team dynamic, and benefits.
Why Clarity Wins Clear, concise, and realistic job descriptions respect the candidate’s time. They result in fewer irrelevant applications and a higher conversion rate of quality talent.
Conclusion Review your current job listings. If they read like a robotic list of demands, it’s time for a rewrite. Humanize your JD to attract human talent.
