A medical device engineer resume that just says "developed medical devices" gets passed over. Employers want device development, design controls and V&V, compliance, and devices launched. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a biomedical engineer — with FAQs.
A biomechanical engineer resume that just says "did biomechanics" gets passed over. Employers want biomechanics, analysis and testing, design application, and validation. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a medical device engineer — with FAQs.
A human factors engineer resume that just says "did usability" gets passed over. Employers want usability engineering, use-related risk, studies, and standards. This guide shows what to highlight, how to quantify it, how to write skills, and how it differs from a medical device engineer — with FAQs.