Hiring managers spend an average of 11.2 seconds scanning a resume before deciding whether it deserves a closer look. In that window, weak verbs don’t just fail to impress, they actively signal a lack of ownership and impact. The words below are the most common culprits we see across thousands of resumes. Here’s why each one falls flat, and exactly what to write instead.
1. "Responsible for"
Why it’s weak:
This phrase is the #1 offender. It describes your job description, not your contributions. It tells a recruiter what you were assigned, not what you achieved. Every single person in that role was “responsible for” the same things, so it differentiates you from nobody.
Power upgrades: Led · Managed · Spearheaded · Oversaw · Directed
Before: Responsible for managing the onboarding process for new clients
After: Spearheaded a new client onboarding process that cut time-to-value from 14 days to 6
→ See all synonyms for “Responsible for”
2. "Assisted"
Why it’s weak:
“Assisted” is the resume equivalent of saying you showed up. It positions you as a sidekick rather than a contributor. Recruiters assume you played a minor, passive role, even if your actual impact was significant.
Power upgrades: Collaborated · Partnered · Contributed · Facilitated · Enabled
Before: Assisted the marketing team with campaign execution
After: Collaborated with the marketing team to execute a 3-channel campaign that generated 2,400 leads
→ See all synonyms for “Assisted”
3. "Worked on"
Why it’s weak:
Vague doesn’t begin to cover it. “Worked on” says nothing about your role, your contribution, or the outcome. It sounds like you were in the vicinity of a project, not driving it.
Power upgrades: Developed · Designed · Launched · Built · Engineered · Spearheaded
Before: Worked on a new CRM implementation across three regional offices
After: Led CRM implementation across three regional offices, improving pipeline visibility by 40%
→ See all synonyms for “Worked on”
4. "Managed"
Why it’s weak:
“Managed” isn’t technically wrong, it’s just exhausted. Recruiters see it hundreds of times a day. It’s become meaningless filler that obscures rather than reveals what kind of leader you actually are. Did you build something? Transform something? Rescue something?
Power upgrades: Orchestrated · Directed · Oversaw · Championed · Mobilized · Transformed
Before: Managed a team of 8 engineers
After: Orchestrated a cross-functional team of 8 engineers to deliver a platform migration 3 weeks ahead of schedule
→ See all synonyms for “Managed”
5. "Helped"
Why it’s weak:
“Helped” minimizes your contribution before a recruiter even has a chance to assess it. It’s self-deprecating language that suggests you were secondary, regardless of how central you actually were to the outcome.
Power upgrades: Supported · Accelerated · Guided · Bolstered · Advanced · Strengthened
Before: Helped reduce customer churn through better onboarding materials
After: Developed onboarding materials that reduced 30-day customer churn by 18%
→ See all synonyms for “Helped”
6. "Handled"
Why it’s weak:
“Handled” sounds very reactive, like you were putting out fires rather than driving strategy. It implies tasks landed on your desk and you dealt with them, rather than you proactively owning outcomes.
Power upgrades: Managed · Resolved · Directed · Executed · Owned · Oversaw
Before: Handled customer complaints and escalations for enterprise accounts
After: Resolved enterprise escalations with a 93% first-contact resolution rate, reducing churn risk on $2.5M+ ARR
→ See all synonyms for “Handled”
7. "Utilized"
Why it’s weak:
“Utilized” is what happens when someone knows “used” is too plain and overcorrects. It reads as corporate buzzword, adding syllables without adding meaning. Just say what you did with the tool, not that you utilized it.
Power upgrades: Leveraged · Applied · Deployed · Implemented · Integrated
Before: Utilized Salesforce to manage the sales pipeline
After: Implemented Salesforce dashboards that gave leadership real-time pipeline visibility, improving forecast accuracy by 32%
→ See all synonyms for “Utilized”
8. "Involved in"
Why it’s weak:
This one might be the most damaging of all, because it openly admits you don’t know how to describe your own contribution. “Involved in” is what you write when you weren’t sure what your role actually was — or when you’re underselling it.
Power upgrades: Contributed to · Collaborated on · Executed · Supported · Partnered on
Before: Involved in the launch of three new product lines
After: Contributed to the launch of three product lines, owning the competitive research and go-to-market positioning for each
→ See all synonyms for “Involved”
9. "Supported"
Why it’s weak:
“Supported” isn’t always wrong, but it’s frequently used as a catch-all to describe anything that’s hard to quantify. It signals a backup role without explaining the nature or impact of that support.
Power upgrades: Enabled · Partnered · Advised · Reinforced · Facilitated · Bolstered
Before: Supported the sales team during the company’s enterprise expansion
After: Enabled the sales team’s enterprise expansion by building a library of 40+ technical proposal templates, reducing deal cycle time by 2 weeks
→ See all synonyms for “Supported”
10. "In charge of"
Why it’s weak:
A slightly more assertive cousin of “responsible for,” but with the same problem: it tells a recruiter about your duties without revealing your impact. The phrase also has a slightly informal tone that doesn’t match the authority it’s trying to convey.
Power upgrades: Directed · Oversaw · Led · Governed · Owned · Administered
Before: In charge of vendor relationships and contract renewals
After: Directed vendor relationships and renegotiated 12 supplier contracts, reducing annual spend by $345K
→ See all synonyms for “In charge of”
The Pattern Behind All 10
Look at any of the upgrades above and you'll spot the same thing, they describe what you did, not what you were told to do. And they leave room for an outcome. It comes down to this:
You don’t have to quantify everything, though you should where you can. Even swapping a passive phrase for a precise active verb signals to a recruiter that you take ownership. And ownership is exactly what every hiring manager is looking for.

