GET HIRED: The Resume Magic Formula, Revealed
In this series, our talent team shares personal insight into the hiring process 鈥 from perfecting your resume to negotiating that sweet, sweet job offer.
Get inspired, and Get Hired!
Resumes are tough. How in the world are you supposed to 鈥渟ummarize鈥 your entire career, education, skill set, professional wins, leadership experience, and personal interests at all鈥 let alone in ONE PAGE?!?
Fear not 鈥 we鈥檙e here to answer that question. But first, let鈥檚 do a little mythbusting. Your resume is not an autobiography. It shouldn鈥檛 chronicle every detail of your personal and professional life. That鈥檚 what Twitter is for.
Instead, it鈥檚 more like the snappy synopsis you鈥檇 find on the back cover of your autobiography 鈥 a quick, compelling introduction that grabs the reader鈥檚 attention and makes them want the full story. (If it all goes as planned, you鈥檒l have the chance to tell that story yourself. More on that later.)
The Resume Magic Formula: Revealed
Gotcha! We all know there鈥檚 no magic formula for a picture-perfect resume layout. Your story is unique, and the way you tell it should change based on a number of factors (like the company you want to join, where you are in your career, or the role itself). That said, we鈥檝e identified three critical steps that everyone should take when building a resume.
1. Simplify, simplify, simplify.
Skip the fancy fonts, graphics, and gifs.
Talent teams go through hundreds of resumes every week, and no one has time to waste squinting at an unintelligible script font. If it鈥檚 not legible, it鈥檚 on to the next. And if you can鈥檛 get past the 鈥渇irst look,鈥 none of that extra flare will matter anyway.
Be smart with spacing.
Don鈥檛 squish everything together just so your content fits nicely on one page. If it鈥檚 hard for you to read, it probably won鈥檛 get read.
Make your headings stand out.
Headings are like resume road signs. Done well, they quickly and easily direct the reader鈥檚 eyes to the information they鈥檙e looking for. Done poorly鈥 you鈥檙e better off without them.
2. Keep your content relevant.
Here鈥檚 a cheat sheet for organizing your content so that recruiters can find the most important information first.
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE:
Recency and relevancy come first.
Your most recent and relevant jobs should take up the most space on the page. (Caveat: if a previous job is better aligned to the position you鈥檙e applying for, dedicate extra space to that experience.)
Bullet points are your best friends.
Utilize bullet points for readability, and begin each bullet point with an active verb. Don鈥檛 just regurgitate your job responsibilities; include quantifiable achievements.
For example, instead of this:
- 鈥Redesigned our partner鈥檚 homepage using UX best practices.鈥
Try this:
- 鈥Redesigned our partner鈥檚 homepage with an improved user flow and clear CTAs, lowering page-abandon rate by 30%.鈥
Pro-tip: use numbers and percentages to make those achievements really pop.
Don鈥檛 leave gaps in your work history.
For previous roles that aren鈥檛 super-relevant, include only the basics (ie. company name, job title, and years held). This helps show your continuous career progression without wasting valuable space.
Tailor your experience to the new role.
Read over the job description for the role you want, and make sure the skill sets they鈥檙e asking for align with your resume. They don鈥檛 need to match exactly, but framing your past experience in the context of the new job will absolutely help your resume stand out.
EDUCATION:
Experience over education.
Unless you鈥檙e still in school, put your 鈥淧rofessional Experience鈥 section above your 鈥淓ducation鈥 section. We want that real-world experience.
Cut unnecessary extracurriculars.
Graduated more than 10 years ago? (Belated congratulations!) At this point, recruiters don鈥檛 need to know about the clubs and intramural teams you were a part of. Instead, include applicable classes you took or honors you received. Graduating Summa Cum Laude is typically a better success indicator than playing club volleyball.
ADDITIONAL SKILLS/INTERESTS:
List relevant skills together.
Don鈥檛 skip on skills that would help you on the job in question. This includes software, applications, programs, languages etc.
Get (a little) personal.
If you have space, list hobbies or community involvement initiatives you're passionate about. This gives the hiring team a better picture of who you are and what motivates you.
3. Proofread. Then proofread again.
So, you鈥檝e finished your resume. The hard part is over 鈥 but you鈥檙e not done yet. Now, it鈥檚 time for the most important (albeit not-so-glamorous) last step: proofreading.
Read it once. Read it twice. Read it to your cat. Ask a friend read it. Then have your friend read it to your cat.
After all that, take five minutes to QA your formatting. (It鈥檒l be well worth it.) Print a copy of your resume and make sure everything looks right on paper. Then, email a digital copy to yourself to make sure the attachment comes through correctly.
Bottom line: go the extra mile to ensure accuracy. First impressions are more influential than you might imagine.
Three Magic Words
Simple. Relevant. Error-free.
At the end of the day, the best resumes will showcase your most relevant experience AND provide specific examples of the impact you鈥檝e made for your company. With no typos to boot.
(Oh. Turns out, there IS a magic formula for resume formatting after all.)