My most recent job that involved an official job description (besides my current role) was as an SOA Fiscal and Admin Specialist for Oregon State’s Clubs and Orgs office. The job posting encouraged me to apply because I was looking for an office job style. The pay for the job was also slightly above OSU’s minimum hourly wage, which was enticing. Since I already knew I wanted to apply for an on-campus job, the job posting was not totally responsible for my decision to apply. However, certain factors included in the job description did cause me to move the position higher up on my list of preferred roles.
My experience on the job matched the job description quite well. Since the job posting is no longer available on the OSU jobs website, I cannot provide a copy of the job description. However, I did take notes on the job description to help me write my cover letter when preparing to apply. Based on these notes, I feel that the work activities and listed tasks in the job description aligned almost exactly with what I did on the job. I mainly assisted clubs with funding request submissions and maintained regular office hours to assist drop-in consultations, just as the job description indicated. In my opinion, the largest difference between the job description and my actual position was the frequency I did each task vs what the job description claimed the frequency would be. In the description, some tasks were labeled as 85% of the job’s responsibilities, while other tasks represented the remaining 15% of time on the job. I felt that I spent way more than 15% of my time on tasks that were part of the second category.