🚫 What Information You Should Avoid Including in Your Resume — Especially as an Instrumentation Engineer
Instrumentation Career Guide

🚫 What Information You Should Avoid Including in Your Resume — Especially as an Instrumentation Engineer

⚙️ Why a Resume Should Be Like a Control System

A good control system has:
Inputs: Relevant process data.
Processing logic: Intelligent interpretation.
Outputs: Clear, accurate, and useful results.

Your resume should function the same way — process inputs (experience, skills, achievements), filter out the noise (unnecessary data), and deliver a clear output: “This candidate fits the role.”

Unfortunately, many engineers overload their resumes with redundant or outdated signals, making it hard for hiring systems (and humans) to detect the real strengths.

1đź§­ 1. Avoid Including Irrelevant Personal Information

Instrumentation engineers often come from diverse backgrounds, but remember — the recruiter isn’t calibrating your personal life, only your professional fit.

Information to Avoid:

  • Age or Date of Birth
  • Marital Status
  • Gender
  • Religion or Nationality
  • Passport details
  • Father’s / Mother’s name
  • Complete home address

Why Avoid It:

Most multinational companies — especially in oil & gas, power, and EPC sectors — follow anti-bias and data-protection policies. Adding such personal details could raise red flags or make your resume appear outdated.

Better Alternative:

Just mention your city and country (e.g., “Based in Chennai, India”) and your professional email and phone number. That’s enough for any recruiter.

Remember: The less personal information you reveal, the more attention goes to your professional skills.

2đź§° 2. Avoid Listing Responsibilities Without Achievements

This is one of the most common mistakes among instrumentation engineers. Many resumes sound like job descriptions rather than a record of impact.

Example of What NOT to Write:

  • “Responsible for preparing instrument datasheets and loop diagrams.”
  • “Handled calibration and FAT activities.”

These statements tell what you did, but not how well you did it.

Better Approach:

  • “Prepared 300+ instrument datasheets and 120 loop diagrams for offshore brownfield project (QatarEnergy), ensuring compliance with Shell DEP and IEC standards.”
  • “Led calibration and FAT for 75 transmitters, reducing commissioning delays by 15%.”

Why It Matters:
Recruiters look for quantifiable achievements — improvements, cost savings, efficiency gains, project impact — not just duties.
Every engineer performs similar tasks; what makes you stand out is how effectively you performed them.

3🧠 3. Avoid Listing Every Project You’ve Ever Worked On

Instrumentation engineers, especially with 10+ years of experience, often have a long list of projects — from desalination plants to refineries and FPSOs.

But your resume isn’t a project history report; it’s a selection of highlights.

Why Avoid Overloading Projects:

  • Recruiters typically spend less than 10 seconds per resume.
  • Lengthy lists make it hard to identify your core strengths.
  • ATS (Applicant Tracking Systems) may rank you lower for keyword density dilution.

Better Approach:

  • Include only the 3–5 most relevant projects.
  • Focus on your role, achievements, and technologies used.

Example:

Senior Instrumentation Engineer – XYZ Company, Chennai (2014–2017)
• Designed and reviewed control valve sizing and hook-ups for water treatment projects.
• Optimized impulse line layouts, improving installation time by 20%.
• Coordinated FAT and SAT with vendors for DP transmitters and PLC systems.

4đź’Ľ 4. Avoid Generic Career Objectives

Every recruiter has read this line a thousand times:
“To obtain a challenging position in a progressive organization where I can utilize my skills and grow with the company.”
That’s noise — not signal.

Why It Hurts:

  • It’s generic and says nothing unique about you.
  • It wastes prime resume real estate (the top section).

Better Alternative:

Write a professional summary — a short, targeted paragraph that defines your identity and specialization.

Example:

Instrumentation Design Engineer with 18 years’ experience in EPC/FEED projects for Oil & Gas, Water, and Petrochemical industries. Specialized in Control Valves, Functional Safety (IEC 61511), and DCS/PLC interface engineering.

This gives an instant picture of your professional depth.

5đź§ľ 5. Avoid Listing Irrelevant Skills or Software

Instrumentation engineers sometimes include every software they’ve ever heard of — from AutoCAD to MATLAB to Photoshop!

Why This Is a Problem:

  • It dilutes your professional identity.
  • Recruiters may question your focus.
  • ATS systems might flag irrelevant keywords.

Better Approach:

Focus on role-specific tools:

  • SPI (SmartPlant Instrumentation / Intools)
  • AutoCAD
  • AVEVA Instrumentation
  • Honeywell Experion / DeltaV
  • Control valve sizing tools (Fisher, Flowserve, Samson)
  • SIL verification tools (exSILentia, Safety Loop Pro)
Pro Tip: If you’re a senior engineer, group tools by domain:
Design Tools: SPI, AVEVA Instrumentation
Simulation & Sizing: Fisher Specification Manager, Flowserve Valvue
Control Systems: DeltaV, Experion PKS, PCS7

6đź”§ 6. Avoid Including Salary Information or Expected CTC

Many engineers still include “Current CTC” or “Expected Salary” at the bottom of their resume.

Why Avoid It:

  • Salary discussions belong in later interview stages, not the first impression.
  • Including it may make your resume filtered out by recruiters if it doesn’t align with their budget.
  • It shifts the focus from competence to compensation.

Better Approach:

State that you are open for discussion or leave it out entirely.
Remember, your expertise — not your CTC — should trigger interest first.

7đź§Ż 7. Avoid Overly Long Resumes

Instrumentation engineers often take pride in detailed documentation — datasheets, loop diagrams, and system architecture drawings — but a resume is not a design dossier.

Optimal Resume Length:

  • 0–5 years experience: 1 page
  • 5–15 years experience: 2 pages
  • 15+ years experience: Maximum 3 pages

Beyond that, key information gets buried.
Think of it this way: The more concise your resume, the more control you have over what the recruiter sees.

8📉 8. Avoid Outdated Technical Keywords

Instrumentation evolves rapidly — DCS, SIS, and network protocols keep changing. Using outdated terms can make your resume look stale.

Avoid:

  • “Pneumatic Control Systems” (unless specific to project)
  • “Analog control panels”
  • “Relay logic systems”
  • “Foxboro I/A (obsolete)”

Use Instead:

  • “Modernization of legacy systems”
  • “DCS migration (Honeywell TDC2000 → Experion PKS)”
  • “Fieldbus / HART / Modbus TCP integration”
  • “Functional Safety lifecycle per IEC 61511”

This shows that you stay current with technology trends — something recruiters value highly.

9🧍‍♂️ 9. Avoid Unprofessional Email IDs

Recruiters notice details. A casual or funny email ID can ruin a professional impression.

Avoid:

  • crazyengineer89@gmail.com
  • rajathehero@yahoo.com

Better:

  • Name.surname.instrunexus@gmail.com
  • Name.Initial.instrumentation@gmail.com

Professionalism starts even before your first conversation.

10🔍 10. Avoid Listing Every Training You’ve Ever Attended

Instrumentation engineers love certifications — and that’s great. But not every internal toolbox talk or online course belongs on your resume.

Why Avoid Over-Listing:

It makes the document cluttered and less impactful.

Better Approach:

List only industry-recognized and relevant certifications, such as:

  • Functional Safety (TĂśV / exida / CFSP)
  • Hazardous Area Classification (ATEX / IECEx)
  • ISA-5.1, ISA-18.2, or API-RP 551 training
  • Vendor-specific DCS / PLC training (Honeywell, Emerson, Siemens)

If you have many, create a “Key Certifications” section with 4–5 major ones.

11📜 11. Avoid Including References

The old line “References available upon request” is obsolete.

Why Avoid It:

  • Recruiters assume you’ll provide references later in the process. Listing them wastes space and may expose personal contact information unnecessarily.

Use that space to highlight achievements instead.

12📎 12. Avoid Heavy Formatting or Fancy Templates

Many engineers download flashy resume templates with multiple columns, gradients, and icons. These may look attractive to the eye — but they confuse Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS).

Why Avoid:

  • ATS can’t read columns, tables, or icons properly.
  • Important keywords (like “Control Valve” or “Loop Diagram”) might get missed.

Better Approach:

Stick to a clean, single-column layout:
Font: Calibri, Arial, or Helvetica
Font size: 10–11 pt
Use bold headings for sections
Avoid colored text and heavy graphics
Think of it like a P&ID — clean, readable, and standardized.

13đź§© 13. Avoid Copy-Pasting Company Descriptions

Recruiters don’t need to read a company profile on your resume. Writing a paragraph like:
“VA Tech Wabag is a leading water treatment EPC company operating in 20 countries…”
is wasted space.

Better:

Focus on your role and contribution, not the company’s overview.

Example:

“As a Senior Instrumentation Engineer at XYZ Compahy, handled design and vendor coordination for RO & UF package instrumentation, ensuring alignment with project FAT schedules.”

14📊 14. Avoid Ambiguous Job Titles

Sometimes engineers write internal or informal titles like:
“Project I&C Guy”
“Instrumentation Lead – Shutdown”
“Technical Support (Instrumentation/Process)”
These confuse recruiters and ATS systems.

Better:

Use industry-standard titles:
“Instrumentation Design Engineer”
“Senior Control & Automation Engineer”
“Lead Instrument Engineer – Brownfield Projects”
Consistency in titles makes your profile search-friendly.

15🔄 15. Avoid Listing Obsolete Contact Information

Recruiters need quick contact options. Outdated phone numbers or old company emails cause missed opportunities.

Tips:

  • Use a personal, active email ID.
  • Include a LinkedIn profile link.
  • Avoid listing multiple numbers.
  • No need for physical address — just “Location: Doha, Qatar” is fine.

16🗂️ 16. Avoid Academic Details Beyond Relevance

Once you have a few years of experience, the recruiter doesn’t care about your 10th or 12th marks.

Avoid:

  • “Scored 82% in 10th grade”
  • “Completed Diploma in 2002 with First Class”

Better:

“B.E. Instrumentation and Control Engineering, XYZ Engineering College, Place, 2004.”
Simple, clear, and professional.

17đź’¬ 17. Avoid Overuse of Technical Jargon

Yes, you’re an expert — but the recruiter reading your resume might not be.

Avoid filling sentences with jargon like:

“Configured multivariable DP transmitters for high viscosity service with remote seal capillary compensation.”

Instead:

“Configured DP transmitters with remote seals for accurate measurement in high-viscosity process lines.”
Readable language always wins.

18⚡ 18. Avoid Mentioning Weaknesses or Failures

Some resumes include a “Strengths and Weaknesses” section — that’s unnecessary and outdated.

Recruiters want results and competence, not self-assessment.

Skip subjective statements like:

  • “Weakness: Too detail-oriented.”
  • “Weakness: Perfectionist.”

They add no value and can backfire.

19đź§± 19. Avoid Repetition

When engineers copy the same bullet points across multiple roles (“prepared datasheets,” “attended meetings,” “reviewed P&IDs”), it shows stagnation.

Instead:

Demonstrate growth and technical maturity.

Example:

Junior Engineer: “Prepared loop diagrams and junction box layouts.”
Senior Engineer: “Reviewed and approved loop drawings, ensured compliance with client specifications (QatarEnergy).”
Lead Engineer: “Led instrumentation deliverables for 3 EPC projects, mentoring 6 junior engineers.”

Show progression — not repetition.

20đź§® 20. Avoid Neglecting Keywords

While this is about avoiding unnecessary info, it’s equally about not omitting the right words.

Instrumentation job descriptions often include keywords like:
Control Valves, SIL, Functional Safety, PLC/DCS, Loop Diagrams, SPI, Hook-ups, Datasheets, Hazardous Area Classification, Fieldbus, Commissioning.

If your resume lacks these, ATS might skip you entirely — even if you’re qualified.

Balance is key: Avoid noise, but include signal words that define your specialization.

Copywrite @instrunexus.com

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