The Extravagant Mind: the Résumé is dead, now what?
EDITOR: The résumé is no longer enough. Not because people have stopped working hard, but because the way we present competence has outgrown the paper meant to contain it. What once served as a reliable snapshot of ability has now become a carefully curated performance, polished to impress, but often disconnected from how people think, adapt, and contribute. We are now being pushed to find new ways to vet applicants. This moment calls for a shift in mindset. It calls for an extravagant mind, one that refuses to settle for surface-level indicators and instead seeks evidence of real thinking, real capacity, and real presence.
Today’s applicant understands the system. Keywords are tailored, achievements are amplified, and formats are refined to pass screening processes.Yet the most important questions remain unanswered. Can this person think critically? Can they solve problems when the situation is unclear? Can they adjust when things fall apart? Can they work with others in ways that build rather than break? A résumé rarely tells us this. The responsibility now sits with organizations and leaders to rethink how we assess people. We must design processes that allow individuals to demonstrate, not just declare. Short problem-solving tasks, scenario-based discussions, and real-time interactions can reveal far more than a list of qualifications ever could. What we need is less performance on paper and more evidence in practice.
In contexts like St. Vincent and the Grenadines, where community, reputation, and lived experience already shape opportunity, this shift is especially relevant. We cannot afford to rely solely on documents that may not reflect the full reality of a person. We must create space for individuals to show how they think, how they respond, and how they contribute in real time. An extravagant mind understands that talent is not always loud on paper.
Some of the most capable individuals may not present well in traditional formats, yet when given the opportunity, they demonstrate clarity, sound judgment, and meaningful impact.
If we continue to depend on outdated tools, we risk overlooking the very people we need to move forward.
This is not about discarding the résumé entirely. It still has value; but its role must change. The résumé should introduce, not define. It should open the door, not determine who walks through it. The future of hiring belongs to those willing to see beyond the page, to test for thinking, and to build systems that reward authenticity over performance. That is the work of the extravagant mind.
Kevan Glasgow
