A categorized list of strong resume action verbs with before-and-after bullet rewrites, plus the overused buzzwords to drop—so your real experience reads sharp without exaggeration.
How long should a resume be? Use one page for 0-7 years of experience and two pages only when every line earns it. What to cut, how to tighten, and when two pages is fine.
A practical guide to writing a resume with little or no experience: use projects, coursework, internships, and volunteer work to prove transferable skills honestly.
Learn how to write a career-change resume that reframes your real, transferable experience honestly — with a strong summary, the right hybrid format, and a confident take on your pivot.
Awards and achievements are credibility boosters — when listed well. Learn which awards belong on a resume, where to put them, how to format and add context so they land, and which ones to leave off.
Write a marketing resume that proves impact with real metrics like ROAS, CAC, and conversion lift — plus how to choose channels and position yourself as a specialist or generalist.
Startup resumes are read differently than big-company ones. Founders want ownership, impact, range, and scrappiness — not corporate polish. Learn what startups look for, how to lead with ownership and results, and how to tailor your resume by startup stage.
A one-page resume is the standard for most job seekers — but fitting it without cramming or cutting your impact is a skill. Learn what to cut first, how to fit one page without shrinking the font to nothing, and when two pages is actually okay.