Professional Resume Format
Professional Resume Format
Professional Resume Format
STUDENT GUIDE
TO
THE PROFESSIONAL
RESUME action words
quantify
results
consistent
professional
hiring audience
proofed
format
skills targeted
concise
dynamic
branding design
Table of Contents
Guide
Introduction to the Professional Resume 2
Step 1 | Complete a Career Profile 3
Step 2 | Build your Document Structure: Format and Design 5
Step 3 | Develop Your Content 8
Step 4 | Final Review and Conversion to Web Ready Format 12
1
Introduction to the Professional Resume
A wellcrafted, professional resume will open many doors and give you the best possible chance for getting an
interview. Once you land the interview, then its up to you to land the job. So, resumes dont get you the job, but
they are a critical element of the job search that leads to an offer.
The staff at the Career Development Center at MTSU builds hundreds of resumes each year and also trains
for resume writing by reviewing thousands of resumes written by professional resume writers. We also listen to
feedback from recruiters and hiring managers. Although youll find that just about everyone has a different opin-
ion on how to write a resume, our goal is to help you create your own resume based on core principles so that
youll have a professional resume throughout the course of your career.
So what exactly is a resume anyway? Lets start with a basic definition. When you think about it, a resume is
actually a marketing document that highlights your unique knowledge, skills, education, experience and achieve-
ments that meet your target audiences needs.
Three key elements that you will need to master in crafting a professional resume are:
1. Content: The actual word choice and phrasing should be concise yet descriptive and speak to the needs
of your targeted hiring audience.
2. Format: How the information is structured or organized to best present your content.
3. Design: These elements include font type, font size, color, underline, bold or italic script, use of white
space, graphics, and other tools outside of content.
2
c o m p l e t e a c a r e e r p r o f i l e
The idea of a career profile is to gather as much content as possible for use in crafting your resume. Dont worry
with any format/design concerns and dont focus on your word choice for now. Just work on collecting as much
factual information about yourself as possible.
Key Skills/Knowledge/Expertise (Again, using real job listings, develop a list of key terms of additional skills,
knowledge, and/or expertise that fit your career goals and direction. Shoot for a list of 9-15 items):
Study Abroad/Fellowship/Internships:
Most Relevant Coursework (9-15 courses):
Licenses/Certifications/Training:
*repeat above as needed for additional degrees
3
c o m p l e t e a c a r e e r p r o f i l e
Accomplishments (List your accomplishments. Focus on the skills you used, the results you achieved, and any proj-
ects you completed along with key problems you solved. Ask yourself if you did anything to increase revenue, reduce
expenses, or make anything more efficient. Were you commended for doing anything well? Take a look at any annual
performance reviews for positive feedback about your results.):
Company Name:
Company Location:
Brief Description of Company (Size, Industry, Products/Services):
Accomplishments:
Company Name:
Company Location:
Brief Description of Company (Size, Industry, Products/Services):
Accomplishments:
4
b u i l d y o u r d o c u m e n t s t r u c t u r e
Format
Take a look at the principles below to give your document effective format and design. Format has to do with the
way your information is organized, while design deals with the many elements that will give your resume visual
appeal. Format and design choices should be intentional and speak to your hiring audience. We like to use the
word principles rather than rules because resume writing is a subjective process and many opinions exist. Our
advice is to always consider your hiring audience first and then utilize resume guides for tips and examples of
how the professional resume is created.
1. Research
2. Internships
3. Volunteer Work
4. Leadership
5. Laboratory Skills
6. Publications
7. Professional Memberships
8. Presentations
5
b u i l d y o u r d o c u m e n t s t r u c t u r e
Design Elements
Design can give your resume instant visual appeal and is critical in getting your readers attention. Design in-
cludes a cohesive strategy that seeks to maximize the use of font size and type, borders, margins, color, head-
ings, white space, graphics, shading and other elements. All the design choices are in service of your hiring
audiences preferences. So, consider the industry, company culture, and type of position youre targeting.
Start with a font size of 11 point for your main body and 16-24 point for you name. Be careful not to use too
many font sizes which will give your resume a cluttered look.
Insider Tip: You can choose from thousands of fonts. Just remember to save your final resume file as a
document file and also as a PDF before submitting your resume. Always submit the PDF version of your re-
sume unless directed otherwise. Saving as a PDF bakes the fonts you use into the document so it doesnt
matter if the recipient has those fonts on their machine or not.
3 Samples to Consider:
1. RGB= 32, 73, 125 Blue (Conservative, Calming, Stability)
2. RGB= 55, 121, 52 Green (Growth, Environment, Freshness)
3. RGB= 148, 54, 52 Red (Energy, Excitement, Risk)
Insider Tip: In Word, from the Home tab, click the Font Color drop down tab and choose More Colors.
From there, choose Custom Colors and enter the RGB values.
6
b u i l d y o u r d o c u m e n t s t r u c t u r e
Diamond Bullet
Box Bullet
Diamond Dot Bullet
Circle Bullet
7
d e v e l o p y o u r c o n t e n t
The difference between a branding section and its predecessor, the objective statement, is that the branding
section focuses more on how you meet the employers needs and the objective statement was more about you
and your career goals. Objective statements also lacked substance and failed to describe specific knowledge and
skills that are relevant to the hiring audience.
Insider Tip: If youre struggling to put your branding section in to words, do a quick search and print 5
current job postings that fit your interests. Then highlight the skills/knowledge/expertise that you have that
match the needs of the job postings. Make sure you work these qualities into your branding section.
SOFTWARE ENGINEER/PROGRAMMER
C++, Perl, Object Oriented Design/Development, Windows, Unix
Information systems graduate with four years of programming and application development experience. Skilled
in creating error-free programs and identifying and solving system problems. Software design and development
in C++, C, Java, Perl, and PHP in Windows, UNIX and Linux.
Core Strengths:
Sample #2
COMMUNICATIONS SPECIALIST
A self-motivated communicator who energizes teams and organizations to achieve positive public relations
using effective interpersonal communication skills, project management skills, and social media outreach
strategies. Strengthens client relationships through blogging, special event promotions, and engagement on
Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
8
d e v e l o p y o u r c o n t e n t
Make sure you have your exact degree title, major, minor and concentration (if applicable) listed correctly. If you
have extensive content in one or more areas under your education section, you may need to create a separate
section for that content.
There is a definite art to writing effective content about your previous experience. It needs to be dynamic, re-
sults-focused and descriptive enough while still being efficient.
If you have space, you might include a one-line or two-line description of the employer and a one-line or two-
line description of your role at the company. This approach will help you focus on skills and results for your bullet
points.
9
d e v e l o p y o u r c o n t e n t
250+ Key verbs you can use to add more dynamic language to your resume and career correspondence
10
d e v e l o p y o u r c o n t e n t
11
f i n a l r e v i e w
Principle #3 - Create a text only resume for submission to web based applications.
Many job listing databases and company applications are now available on the Web, which is great. Howev-
er, when you submit your resume in whole or part to a text box on the Web, youll need to have a text only
resume ready to go. This means that all your hard work on the design elements of your resume will now be
stripped out!
Follow these steps and youll be ready to cut and paste your text resume to online databases quickly and effi-
ciently.
1. Open the final version of your Word document file. Select All then choose the Copy command.
2. Open Notepad on your PC or TextEdit on your Mac. Then choose the Paste command.
3. Review the resume and remove any unusual characters and fix spacing and format problems.
4. Add blank lines to improve the readability.
5. Use keyboard characters to deliver text only formatting. This might mean ALL CAPS for headings or
using characters like ***, (___), >, <, #, +, ^ to help highlight your content.
6. Save this text only version of your resume and have 2-3 people proofread for you.
12