A GIS specialist resume that just says "made maps" gets passed over. Employers want spatial analysis, data and automation, products delivered, and decision impact. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from an environmental scientist — with FAQs.
A SLAM engineer resume that just says "worked on SLAM" gets passed over. Employers want localization and mapping, accuracy, sensor fusion, and real-time deployment. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a perception engineer — with FAQs.
A GIS analyst resume that just says "made maps" gets passed over. Employers want spatial analysis, data, tools, and impact. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a data analyst — with FAQs.
A cartographer resume that just says "made maps" gets passed over. Employers want maps and projects, design craft, technical and data, and a portfolio. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a GIS analyst — with FAQs.
A photogrammetrist resume that just says "did photogrammetry" gets passed over. Employers want projects, processing, accuracy, and deliverables. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a surveyor — with FAQs.