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Reading a Job Description Like a Recruiter

Job ads are coded. Learn to spot the must-haves, the wishlist, and the quiet red flags.

A job description is two documents in one: a list of what the team genuinely needs, and a wishlist someone pasted in without thinking. Learning to tell them apart saves you from both over- and under-applying.

Requirements vs. wishlist

The first three or four bullets are usually the real job. The long tail — “familiarity with X, Y, Z a plus” — is mostly aspirational. You do not need to match every line. If you hit the top responsibilities, apply.

Quiet red flags

  • “Wears many hats” / “fast-paced” — often code for understaffed.
  • “Rockstar / ninja” — a culture tell, and rarely a good one.
  • No salary range where it’s normal to list one — leverage gap.

Read the responsibilities, not just the requirements. They tell you what your actual days would look like — which matters far more than the buzzword checklist.