The importance of having a very brief (1-3) lines of "objective" on the actual resume is that often times it gets physically separated from the cover letter. If someone doing pre-screening separates the two, especially if printed, and the hiring manager only gets the resume it gives him/her some idea of your goals, which he is otherwise unaware of with the absence of the cover letter.
The idea that your objective is to "get the job" is obvious and not really the point, that's why you're sending the docs, right?
Say you are applying to a large firm that is hiring 15 people. They have 15 similar jobs but you want a specific one. The objective is the place be specific.
Hope that helps.
The idea that your objective is to "get the job" is obvious and not really the point, that's why you're sending the docs, right?
Hope that helps.
