Insights

Do African Recruiters Really Want Long Resumes?

Written by Nicole Darling | Feb 15, 2026 11:00:00 PM

A persistent belief across many African job markets is that recruiters expect highly detailed resumes. Candidates are often advised to include everything: every responsibility, every course, every certificate, and every role going back many years. The result is frequently a four, five, or even six-page document.

This belief is understandable, but it is largely incorrect for modern hiring.

Where the belief comes from

The idea that “more detail is better” did not appear out of nowhere. It is shaped by several real influences:

Academic and public-sector traditions
In many African countries, universities, government agencies, and parastatals still request CVs rather than resumes. These documents reward completeness and history. For candidates whose early exposure to hiring comes from these systems, length feels normal and expected.

Early career guidance and peer advice
Career workshops, NYSC-style programs, and informal coaching often emphasize “show everything you’ve done so nothing is missed.” This advice is well-intentioned, but it confuses documentation with selection.

Fear of being overlooked
In competitive markets, candidates worry that leaving information out may cost them an opportunity. Adding more detail feels safer than cutting content, even when it reduces clarity.

Misunderstanding of ATS systems
Some candidates believe applicant tracking systems reward keyword volume. In reality, most ATS tools rank relevance and alignment, not page count or repetition.

These factors explain the belief. They do not make it accurate.




What recruiters actually optimize for

Across Africa, recruiters in private companies, NGOs, startups, and multinational firms operate under similar constraints:

  • High application volume
  • Limited screening time
  • Clear role requirements
  • Pressure to shortlist efficiently

As a result, recruiters scan resumes quickly to answer a small number of questions:

  • Can this person do the job?
  • Have they done something similar before?
  • What level of responsibility have they handled?
  • Is there evidence of progression or impact?

Length does not help answer these questions. Structure and relevance do.

Why longer resumes work against candidates

Long resumes are not rejected because recruiters dislike detail. They are rejected because excessive detail creates specific problems:

Signal dilution
When everything is included, nothing stands out. Key achievements get buried under routine tasks.

Repetition instead of progression
Many long resumes repeat similar duties across roles rather than showing growth in scope, responsibility, or impact.

Slower decision-making
Recruiters are not paid to read extensively. They are paid to decide. Documents that slow decision-making are less effective.

Mismatch with modern hiring
Most roles now require targeted alignment. A generic, all-purpose resume suggests poor prioritization.

The important distinction: CV vs resume

A CV is a full record.
A resume is a selection tool.

Many African candidates submit CVs when employers are asking for resumes. This mismatch creates frustration on both sides. Recruiters are not asking candidates to hide experience. They are asking them to curate it.

What recruiters actually want instead

Recruiters want:

  • Clear job titles and employers
  • Focused bullets showing outcomes or scope
  • Evidence of progression
  • Relevance to the role applied for
  • A document that can be understood quickly

This is true in Lagos, Nairobi, Accra, Johannesburg, and beyond.

If a page does not add new responsibility, scale, or results, it does not earn its space.

Shorter resumes are not less impressive. They are often more professional.

The takeaway for candidates

The belief that African recruiters want extremely long resumes is based on history, not current hiring practice. Today’s recruiters value judgment, focus, and relevance.

Detail belongs in the interview.
The resume’s job is to earn that interview.