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Follow our expert 8-step process to write a professional resume that passes ATS systems and impresses hiring managers. From format selection to final optimization.
Build Your Resume with AIRecruiters spend an average of 7.4 seconds reviewing a resume
First impressions matter - resumes must be scannable and well-formatted
Source: Ladders Eye-Tracking StudyThe format you choose sets the foundation for your entire resume. Chronological is the most popular (used by 72% of job seekers) and works best if you have a clear career progression. Functional emphasizes skills over work history — ideal for career changers or those with employment gaps. Combination merges both approaches, showcasing skills upfront while maintaining a chronological work history.
For most professionals, the chronological format is your safest bet. It's what hiring managers expect and what ATS systems parse most reliably. If you're unsure, start with chronological — you can always adjust later.
Your header is the first thing recruiters see. Make it count with clear, professional contact details. Include your full name (prominently displayed), phone number, professional email address, city and state (full street address is no longer necessary), and LinkedIn profile URL.
Skip your photo unless you're in an industry or country where it's expected. Never include personal details like age, marital status, or Social Security number. If you have a portfolio website or GitHub profile relevant to your field, include that as well.
"The chronological resume format remains the gold standard because it answers the recruiter's first question: Where are you now and how did you get there? 72% of candidates use it for good reason."
Emily Thompson
Lead Recruiter at Amazon
Your professional summary is your elevator pitch. In 2-4 sentences, communicate who you are, what you bring to the table, and what you're looking for. A strong summary includes your years of experience, key skills, biggest achievement, and target role.
Use a summary if you have 3+ years of experience. Use an objective if you're entry-level, changing careers, or targeting a very specific role. The summary should be tailored to each job you apply for — generic summaries get ignored.
Example: "Results-driven marketing manager with 8+ years of experience in digital marketing and brand strategy. Led campaigns that increased organic traffic by 150% and generated $2.3M in new revenue. Seeking to leverage data-driven marketing expertise as Director of Marketing at a growth-stage SaaS company."
Work experience is the heart of your resume. For each position, include: job title, company name, location, and dates of employment. Then add 3-5 bullet points focusing on accomplishments rather than duties.
The key difference between a good resume and a great one is quantification. Instead of "Managed a sales team," write "Led a 12-person sales team that exceeded quarterly targets by 23%, generating $4.1M in annual revenue." Every bullet point should answer: "What did I do, how did I do it, and what was the measurable result?"
Use the CAR formula (Challenge → Action → Result) or PAR formula (Problem → Action → Result) to structure each bullet point. Start every bullet with a strong action verb.
Resumes with quantified achievements receive 40% more interview requests
Numbers and metrics demonstrate measurable impact and results
Source: CareerBuilder Resume Effectiveness StudyList your education in reverse-chronological order. For each entry, include: degree name, institution, graduation year, and GPA (if 3.5+ and you graduated within the last 3 years). Add relevant coursework, honors, or academic projects if they support your candidacy.
If you have a college degree, you generally don't need to list high school. For recent graduates, education can be placed above work experience to emphasize academic qualifications.
Include relevant certifications, professional development courses, and training programs. Industry certifications (PMP, CPA, AWS, etc.) can significantly boost your resume's impact.
Your skills section should be a strategic mix of hard skills (technical abilities) and soft skills (interpersonal abilities) that match the job description. Read the job posting carefully and mirror the language used for required qualifications.
Organize skills into categories when possible: "Technical Skills," "Languages," "Certifications," "Software & Tools." This makes it easy for both ATS systems and hiring managers to scan quickly.
Include 8-12 skills total. Prioritize hard skills (technical, software, languages) over soft skills (communication, leadership, teamwork). ATS systems primarily scan for hard skills, while soft skills are better demonstrated through your experience bullet points.
"A well-formatted resume with strong keywords can increase your interview chances by 40%. Most candidates underestimate the importance of ATS optimization and lose opportunities before their resume ever reaches a human."
Sarah Mitchell
Senior Technical Recruiter at Google
Optional sections can differentiate you from other candidates with similar qualifications. Consider adding:
Volunteer Experience — Shows character and community involvement. Especially valuable for entry-level candidates.
Languages — Increasingly valuable in a global job market. List language and proficiency level (Native, Fluent, Conversational, Basic).
Projects — Particularly useful for tech roles, creative positions, and recent graduates. Include personal projects, open-source contributions, or academic projects.
Awards & Honors — Industry awards, company recognition, or academic honors add credibility.
Publications — For academic, research, medical, or thought leadership roles.
Only include sections that are relevant to your target role. Every section should earn its place on your resume.
The final step is critical — a single typo can cost you an interview. Follow this checklist:
Proofread: Read your resume backward (bottom to top) to catch errors your brain normally skips. Use a grammar tool, then have a friend review it.
ATS Optimization: Run your resume through an ATS checker to ensure it's parseable. Use standard section headings (Experience, Education, Skills — not Creative Names). Save as PDF unless the application specifically asks for .docx.
Formatting Check: Ensure consistent fonts, spacing, and bullet styles throughout. Use 10-12pt font size for body text and 1-inch margins. Aim for one page (two pages maximum for senior professionals with 10+ years of experience).
Final Review: Does every bullet point demonstrate value? Is it tailored to the specific job? Would you want to interview this person?
Now that you know how to write a resume, take the next step:
Job seekers who landed interviews with professionally written resumes
"Profio helped me overcome a 2-year employment gap. The combination format let me lead with skills while still showing my work history. Recruiters focused on what I could do rather than the gap. Landed a senior PM role at Deloitte!"
Michael Chen
Project Manager at Deloitte
"The resume keywords tool is brilliant. It analyzed job descriptions I was interested in and suggested exact phrases to include. My ATS match rate went from 62% to 94%. Game changer for getting past initial screening."
Olivia Williams
Content Strategist at HubSpot
"I was skeptical about AI resume builders, but Profio proved me wrong. The suggestions were context-aware and actually improved my bullet points. My resume went from generic to compelling in under an hour."
James Anderson
Cybersecurity Analyst at IBM
Choose the right format before writing
Learn moreSee real resume examples by industry
Learn morePower words to strengthen your bullet points
Learn moreKeywords that pass ATS systems
Learn moreQuick tips from hiring managers
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