Show Impact, Not Just Duties
Recruiters spend an average of six seconds scanning a resume. In that time, they need to see that you delivered something measurable, not just that you "used React." Instead of listing responsibilities, lead each bullet with a concrete result.
Before and After Bullet Rewrite
Before (duty-focused):
- Responsible for maintaining the user authentication module.
- Worked on the payment system.
After (impact-focused):
- Reduced login failures by 40% by refactoring the authentication module to use OAuth2 and token-based session management.
- Decreased payment processing time by 20% by rearchitecting the payment microservice and adding caching.
Use the STAR-Lite Formula
For each bullet, write: [Metric/Result] + [Action] + [Context]. Quantify whenever possible (percentages, time saved, revenue impact, users affected). If you don't have exact numbers, use estimates ("reduced manual effort by roughly 30 hours per month").
Choose the Right Resume Format
For most software engineers, a reverse-chronological format works best. List your most recent role first, with 3–6 strong bullets per position. Avoid functional resumes (skill-focused, no timeline) — they confuse ATS and recruiters.
What to Include in Each Section
- Header: Name, phone, email, LinkedIn, GitHub/portfolio (optional but helpful). No photo, no full address — just city and state.
- Summary (optional): Use only if you have 5+ years of experience or a specific narrative (e.g., "Backend engineer specializing in distributed systems"). Keep it 2–3 sentences.
- Skills: List 8–12 relevant technologies, grouped by category (Languages, Frameworks, Cloud, etc.). Don't include buzzwords you can't defend in an interview.
- Experience: Bullets with impact metrics. For each role, include company name, location, title, and dates.
- Education: Degree, school, graduation year (omit if older than 10 years unless relevant). GPA only if above 3.5.
- Projects: For early-career engineers, list 2–3 projects with short descriptions and links to live demos or code.
Optimize for ATS Without Tricks
Applicant tracking systems (ATS) parse your resume into a database. They don't "score" or "rank" your resume by content — they just match keywords from the job description. Your goal is to make parsing easy, not to trick the system.
ATS-Formatting Hard Rules
- Use standard section headings ("Experience," "Skills," "Education"). Avoid graphics, columns, tables, or text boxes — these can break parsing.
- Save and submit as a .docx file unless the employer asks for PDF. .DOCX parses most reliably across all major ATS platforms. If they request PDF, use a clean, text-based PDF (not scanned).
- Font: Use a clean sans-serif like Arial, Calibri, or Helvetica at 10–12pt. No script or decorative fonts.
- Keep margins between 0.5 and 1 inch. Don't cram text.
Keyword Matching Without Stuffing
Read the job description and identify 5–10 key skills (e.g., "Kubernetes," "CI/CD," "REST APIs"). Use these naturally in your resume — in skills, experience bullets, and the summary. Never just list them raw; show you've used them in context.
Tailor for Each Role (One Resume Is Not Enough)
A single generic resume won't land interviews across different domains. Spend 15 minutes per application adjusting your bullets to match the job description's priorities.
Quick Tailoring Checklist
- [ ] Replace the summary with keywords from the job posting.
- [ ] Move the most relevant experiences to the top of each bullet.
- [ ] Add or remove projects that relate to the role.
- [ ] Check that your skills match at least 80% of the "required" section.
- [ ] Remove irrelevant older roles (keep only the last 10–15 years).
Proofread Like a Developer
A single typo can sink your application. Treat your resume like production code: review it in a different format (print or PDF), read it backward, and use a grammar tool. Have a peer review it.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Don't include a photo or personal info (age, gender, marital status). It wastes space and can invite bias.
- Don't use first-person pronouns ("I" or "we"). Bullets should start with verbs.
- Don't list soft skills like "hardworking" or "team player" — demonstrate them through results.
- Don't leave gaps unexplained if they span more than 6 months. Add a one-liner (e.g., "took a sabbatical to build a personal project").
Build your resume with these practices, and you'll see more recruiter callbacks and interview requests.
Ready to sharpen your existing draft? PrismResume helps you rephrase bullets for impact — no sign-up required to start.
Originally published at prismresume.com.
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