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How to Write a Resume That Gets Interviews in 2026
Updated February 27, 2026 · 13 min read
Your resume has 7.4 seconds. That is the average time a recruiter spends on initial screening before deciding to read further or move on. In 2026, your resume also has to pass through AI-powered Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) before a human ever sees it. Over 98% of Fortune 500 companies use ATS software to filter resumes.
This guide shows you how to write a resume that beats both the algorithm and the human. No fluff, no filler -- just the strategies that actually lead to interviews.
There are three resume formats. In 2026, one of them works 90% of the time:
Reverse-chronological (use this): Lists your most recent job first and works backward. This is what recruiters expect, what ATS parses best, and what hiring managers prefer. Use this format unless you have a very specific reason not to.
Functional (avoid): Organizes by skills rather than job history. Recruiters dislike this format because it hides your career timeline. ATS systems also struggle to parse it. Only consider it if you have 5+ year career gaps with no explanation.
Combination (situational): Leads with a skills summary, then lists experience chronologically. Works for career changers who need to highlight transferable skills while still showing work history.
Formatting Rules for 2026
- One page for less than 10 years of experience, two pages maximum for senior roles
- Standard fonts: Arial, Calibri, Garamond, or Helvetica at 10-12pt
- Margins: 0.5 to 1 inch on all sides
- Section headings: bold, slightly larger font, clear hierarchy
- Save as PDF unless the job posting specifically requests .docx
- File name: FirstName-LastName-Resume.pdf
Your contact section should include exactly these elements and nothing more:
- Full name -- largest text on the page
- Phone number -- one number with a professional voicemail
- Email -- professional address (firstname.lastname@gmail.com, not partyguy99@yahoo.com)
- LinkedIn URL -- customize it to linkedin.com/in/yourname
- City and state -- full street address is no longer necessary
- Portfolio URL -- if relevant to your field (design, writing, development)
Leave off: Photo (triggers bias concerns in the US), date of birth, marital status, social security number, and full street address. None of these belong on a modern resume.
Professional Summary
A professional summary is 2-3 sentences at the top of your resume that tell the hiring manager exactly what you bring. It replaces the outdated "objective statement" and should focus on what you deliver, not what you want.
Bad objective: "Seeking a challenging position where I can utilize my skills and grow professionally." This tells the employer nothing useful about you.
Good summary: "Marketing manager with 6 years of experience driving B2B SaaS growth. Led demand generation campaigns that increased qualified leads by 340% and reduced cost-per-acquisition by 28%. Skilled in HubSpot, Google Ads, and data-driven content strategy."
The formula is simple: [Title] with [X years] experience in [specialty]. [Measurable achievement]. [Key skills relevant to the target role].
Work Experience That Stands Out
Your experience section is the most important part of your resume. Most candidates describe their job duties. Winning candidates describe their results.
The Results Formula
Every bullet point should follow this structure: Action verb + what you did + measurable result.
Weak: "Responsible for managing social media accounts and creating content."
Strong: "Grew Instagram following from 2,400 to 45,000 in 8 months through data-driven content strategy, generating $180K in attributed revenue."
Notice the difference. The weak version describes duties. The strong version proves impact with specific numbers. Hiring managers care about outcomes, not responsibilities.
Quantify Everything
Numbers are the most powerful element on a resume. Find ways to quantify every achievement:
- Revenue generated or saved
- Percentage improvements (growth, efficiency, reduction)
- Team size managed
- Budget controlled
- Number of projects completed
- Customer satisfaction scores
- Time saved through process improvements
How Many Bullets Per Job
- Current/most recent role: 4-6 bullet points
- Previous roles: 3-4 bullet points
- Older roles (5+ years ago): 2-3 bullet points or combine into a summary line
Skills Section
Your skills section serves two purposes: helping ATS match you to the job and giving recruiters a quick snapshot of your capabilities.
How to build your skills list: Read the job description and identify every skill mentioned. Include the ones you genuinely have. Add related skills that strengthen your candidacy. Group them by category for easy scanning.
Skills Section Example
Technical: Python, JavaScript, SQL, AWS, Docker, Kubernetes, CI/CD, Git
Tools: Jira, Confluence, Figma, Slack, Notion, Google Analytics
Soft Skills: Cross-functional leadership, stakeholder communication, agile project management
Do not list basic skills like Microsoft Office or "proficient in email." These are assumed and waste space. List skills that differentiate you.
Education
Education placement depends on your career stage:
- Recent graduates (0-2 years experience): Place education above work experience. Include GPA if 3.5+, relevant coursework, and academic achievements.
- Experienced professionals (3+ years): Place education below work experience. Just list degree, institution, and graduation year. GPA and coursework are no longer relevant.
Certifications and Continuing Education
In 2026, certifications often carry more weight than degrees for technical roles. Include relevant certifications with the issuing organization and date. Examples:
- AWS Solutions Architect -- Amazon Web Services, 2025
- Google Analytics 4 Certification -- Google, 2026
- PMP -- Project Management Institute, 2024
- HubSpot Inbound Marketing -- HubSpot Academy, 2026
ATS Optimization
Applicant Tracking Systems scan your resume for keywords, parse your information into structured data, and score you against the job description. Here is how to ensure your resume passes:
Step 1: Mirror the job description. If the listing says "project management," use that exact phrase -- not "managing projects." ATS matches exact keywords. Read the job description and naturally incorporate key terms throughout your resume.
Step 2: Use standard section headings. ATS systems look for "Experience," "Education," "Skills," and "Summary." Creative headings like "My Journey" or "What I Bring" confuse parsers.
Step 3: Avoid formatting traps. Do not use tables, text boxes, headers/footers, images, charts, or multi-column layouts. ATS systems cannot parse these elements and will miss your content entirely.
Step 4: Use both acronyms and spelled-out versions. Write "Search Engine Optimization (SEO)" the first time so ATS catches both the full phrase and the acronym.
Step 5: Test your resume. Free ATS scanning tools like Jobscan and Resume Worded score your resume against a job description. Aim for a 75%+ match score.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Typos and grammar errors: One typo eliminates 77% of resumes according to hiring managers. Proofread three times, then have someone else review it.
- Generic resumes: Sending the same resume to every job. Tailor your summary and skills to each position. It takes 10 minutes and doubles your response rate.
- Listing duties instead of results: "Responsible for..." is the worst way to start a bullet. Lead with action verbs and end with measurable impact.
- Including irrelevant experience: Your high school summer job does not belong on your resume after 5 years of professional experience. Every line should strengthen your candidacy for this specific role.
- Passive language: "Was tasked with" and "helped with" are weak. Use active, specific language: "Led," "Built," "Increased," "Reduced."
- Lying: Background checks catch false claims. Inflated titles, fake degrees, and exaggerated numbers will end your candidacy and potentially your career.
Power Verbs and Action Words
Start every bullet point with a strong action verb. Here are the most effective ones by category:
| Category | Power Verbs |
| Leadership | Led, Directed, Managed, Oversaw, Coordinated, Mentored |
| Achievement | Achieved, Exceeded, Delivered, Earned, Won, Surpassed |
| Growth | Grew, Increased, Expanded, Scaled, Accelerated, Doubled |
| Efficiency | Streamlined, Optimized, Automated, Reduced, Eliminated, Simplified |
| Creation | Built, Designed, Developed, Launched, Created, Established |
| Analysis | Analyzed, Identified, Discovered, Evaluated, Assessed, Measured |
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FAQ
How long should a resume be in 2026?
One page for less than 10 years of experience. Two pages maximum for senior professionals. Recruiters spend an average of 7.4 seconds on initial resume screening. Every word must earn its place.
Should I use a resume template or design my own?
Use a clean, ATS-friendly template. Canva and Google Docs offer free templates that parse correctly through ATS systems. Avoid heavy graphics, tables, headers/footers, and multi-column layouts that confuse ATS parsers.
Do I need a resume summary or objective?
Use a professional summary, not an objective. Objectives tell the employer what you want. Summaries tell them what you deliver. Write 2-3 sentences highlighting your experience level, key skills, and measurable results.
How do I optimize my resume for ATS?
Use keywords from the job description naturally throughout your resume. Use standard section headings like Experience, Education, and Skills. Save as PDF. Avoid tables, images, headers/footers, and fancy formatting.
Should I include references on my resume?
No. Do not include references or write "references available upon request." It wastes space. Employers will ask for references during the interview process when they need them.
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