Best Formats For Entry-Level Resumes

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Summary

Understanding the best formats for entry-level resumes helps new professionals create well-structured, clear, and compelling documents that capture the attention of recruiters and pass automated tracking systems (ATS).

  • Stick to simplicity: Use a clean, single-column format with consistent fonts and spacing, and avoid flashy colors, graphics, or unusual layouts that can be distracting or confuse ATS software.
  • Focus on relevance: Include only the most pertinent skills, experiences, and accomplishments that align with the role you’re applying for to make your resume concise and impactful.
  • Optimize for clarity: Use bullet points to highlight key responsibilities and achievements, incorporate metrics to quantify impact, and ensure sections are well-organized and easy to skim.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Hardika Jain

    PM @Amazon | Grad @University of Washington | Ex-Accenture | Business | Product l Data | AI | Early Career Tips

    2,401 followers

    I got interviews from companies like Amazon, SAP, Siemens, etc., and everyone talks about resumes with a STAR format and quantifying impact. But what about the resume details that actually make a difference? Based on what’s worked for me, I’m sharing a few overlooked (but practical) tips that can help you. Let’s dive in 👇 1. Use U.S. Letter Size & Thoughtful Formatting: 🧠 Why it matters: Many ATS systems and recruiters in the U.S. are used to U.S. letter format(8.5x11, not A4). A4 may cause layout issues, especially with margins and alignment on different systems. 🎯 How to do it: ▪️ Use 0.9–1.15 line spacing, and margins of 0.5 to 1 inch for a perfect balance. Helps your content breathe without looking bare. ▪️Design psychology: Cramped resumes feel overwhelming; too much white space feels empty. ▪️Some candidates try to trick ATS by adding keywords in white text, invisible to humans. It’s detectable, unethical, and can actually get you blacklisted. 2. Human-First, Then ATS-Friendly 🧠 Why it matters: You’re not interviewing with an algorithm. Recruiters, often not from your domain, are the first to read your resume. 🎯 How to do it: ▪️Use clean formatting, consistent font sizes (10.5–12 pt), and easy-to-skim sections. Make sure your sentences make sense to anyone and not just someone technical. ▪️AI can help refine your wording, but always proofread for clarity and tone. Include context when numbers alone aren’t clear: ❌ “Increased sales by xy%” sounds great but without context, it’s meaningless.  So, add scope + baseline if you can: ✅"Boosted monthly sales by xy% within xy months by introducing a GTM strategy across 2 digital channels." 3. Pass the 6-Second Scan with Story-Driven Bullets 🧠Why it matters: Recruiters skim resumes fast, often under 6 seconds, so your bullet points need to do more than just list tasks. (PS: Studies show recruiters scan resumes in an F-shaped pattern: left to right, top to bottom. The top third of your resume (the “hot zone”) gets the most attention.) 🎯 How to do it: ▪️Start each bullet with the intent or principle behind the action (e.g., “Customer Obsession,” “ETL Pipelines”). ▪️Avoid robotic phrasing like: ❌“Built a dashboard to track engagement metrics.” Instead, make it strategic: ✅Customer Obsession: Launched in-product surveys in Excel to surface user pain points, leading to a 22% increase in feature engagement. Hope this helps!  Please share what worked for you, or if you need a template. #ResumeTips #ProductManagement #JobSearch #CareerAdvice #InternationalStudents #TechCareers #EarlyCareer #LinkedInTips

  • View profile for Jordan Mazer
    Jordan Mazer Jordan Mazer is an Influencer

    Partner @ a16z

    113,691 followers

    I've reviewed >100k resumes in my career. So many people make easy to fix mistakes. Here's what I wish everyone knew before submitting an application: Contact info - Include email, linkedin, github/portfolio - Show the actual linkedin url, don't hyperlink with different link text - Include city / state (or relevant to country), full address isn't necessary - designers: password protect at your peril, resume reviewers are lazy Use standard resume template - Order should be Name / contact details --> work xp --> education - Work xp should be listed most recent --> least recent - Use specific dates (month + year) - No sensitive info (DOB, Citizenship, Marital Status, Religion, etc) - No pictures - No skills / jobs chronology "side-bar" 🙄 - No skills / accreditations alphabet soup at top of resume No "fun" stuff - No weird colors (just black) - No "fun" font selection - *Designers, this section doesn't apply to you* Be concise - Max 2 pages - No more than 6 bullets per job - Bullets should be no longer than 1 line (no wrapping text) - Distill, distill, distill - resumes ARE NOT exhaustive - Do not use evasive language (unclear dates, titles, etc) - Use commonly understood (but select) metrics to exhibit impact Errors - No spelling errors!!! - HAVE SOMEONE ELSE PROOFREAD!!!!!!! ------------------------------------------ Resumes are not a place for innovation. More is not better. Be selective and thoughtful. Accept that you will get very little attention from resume reviewers - your job is to decide what to communicate in that very short span. Your resume is a MARKETING TOOL - it's intended to help you get an interview. It is NOT intended to document all of your experience. That's what the interview is for! What else belongs on this list? Any ya'll disagree with? ------------------------------------------ 👋 Follow me (Jordan Mazer), Caitlin Cooke & Jordan Carver for more tips just like this. 🏃♀️ Join the a16z speedrun talent network here: https://lnkd.in/geyt5f9b

  • View profile for Jordan Kaliher

    Director of Client Services - Sales and Marketing Search

    8,097 followers

    Yesterday I reviewed around 600 applications. 600. Here’s the truth: when the volume is that high, small details make a big difference. If you want to stand out, here’s what actually catches a recruiter’s eye in the middle of a sea of resumes: 🔹 Tell me what the company does. You worked at "X Corp"? Cool — but I don’t know every company on Earth. A single line like “SaaS company focused on AI-powered logistics” helps me immediately understand the context of your role. 🔹 Stick to the classic format. There’s a reason the traditional resume layout still dominates. Don’t get “creative” with colors, shapes, or 3-column designs. I’m not hiring a graphic designer (unless I am). Keep it simple, clean, and scannable. 🔹 Give me numbers. “Improved efficiency” sounds fine, but “Reduced processing time by 28%” gives me a reason to believe you’re effective. Quantifiables always beat adjectives. 🔹 Tailor your resume to the job. Generic resumes get generic results. A brief, targeted summary at the top — aligned to the role — sets the tone. 🔹 Make your LinkedIn match. If your resume catches my eye, your profile is the next stop. Make sure it’s updated, aligned, and includes a headline that reflects what you actually do. Most of all? 🔸 Help me help you. The clearer your story, the easier it is to advocate for you. And that’s all most recruiters really want — a reason to move you forward.

  • View profile for Emily Worden 👋

    #1 Career Coach on LinkedIn Worldwide and US (Favikon) | Keynote speaker | Award-winning teacher | Impossible optimist | Rooting for the Green Banner Gang

    116,263 followers

    I have been writing, reading, and reviewing resumes for nine years. Here are some best practices for 2025: ✅ A resume's job is to get you an interview. It's a marketing document, not a detailed career history. You don't need deep details about all of your tasks and responsibilities for all of your roles. Just stick to the highlights that are relevant to the jobs that interest you. 👏 The keyword here is RELEVANT. If it's relevant to the jobs you're applying for, keep it. If it's not relevant, remove it. 👏 ✅ A resume can be more than one page. Two pages are fine. A recruiter would rather see two pages that have lots of white space, 11-point font, and room for the eye to breathe. This is better than trying to cram everything dense into one page with a 9-point font. ✅ Keep the format simple. Avoid graphics or charts. Keep it all in one column (not two). No fancy fonts, stick to the basics. Keep the sections simple and easy to identify. We just want to make this easy to scan. ✅ City and State, not your full address. Don't list your full address on the resume. This protects your privacy and avoids potential bias. Just list your closest city and state. If you live far from a city, you can say, "[city name] metro area." I also recommend creating an email just for your job search and putting that on your resume to protect your privacy. ✅ Lead with the result. Resume bullet points typically go "Did X to achieve Y which resulted in Z." I flip that: "Got results Z by doing X in order to achieve Y." "I got these results by doing this action in order to achieve this goal." Even better if the "results" have metrics attached: "Reduced production time by 20% in six months by implementing new scheduling software for 50 employees that improved cross-functional collaboration." Why lead with the result? This market is very competitive, and you have to stand out from a sea of applicants. Leading with results, outcomes, and achievements helps you do that. It's the difference between show vs. tell. You can TELL me you're good at something (that's boring and generic), or you can SHOW me by sharing bullet points about your results, metrics, and outcomes (that's specific and intriguing). Plus, numbers and results help illustrate your impact. I'm rooting for you. 👊 ♻ Please repost if you think this advice will help others. ***** Hi, have we met? I'm Emily and I'm on a mission to get the #GreenBannerGang back to work, one actionable step at a time. #jobsearch #jobhunt #jobseekers

  • View profile for Forrest Clements

    Career Coach | Former HR Guy

    25,127 followers

    Here are my quick-fire resume best practices (and WHY I recommend these): ✅ Single column format These are more space efficient than two column templates (2 margins instead of 3). You also get more control over the ORDER in which a human reads your resume. ✅ Contact info should include email, LinkedIn, and phone number Use hyperlinks for your email and LI URL (and type out the full URL vs. just "LinkedIn"). Leave off location unless applying for roles in that city. ✅ Tailored summary header Don't say "Professional Summary", say e.g. "Social Media Manager Summary". Put the job function in the header and customize it to each job description. ✅ Bullet point summary Paragraphs are often long and difficult to skim for human readers. They're also harder to quickly customize between applications, and tend to get fluffy pretty quick. Stick to 3-5 bullet points. ✅ Tailored summary for each position You don't need to rewrite your resume for every single job. Just tweak your top summary section. Think of this as your "greatest hits" section where you choose which 3 of your most impressive bullet points to "feature" at the top based on each position. ✅ Section divisions Use page width underlines or another visual cue to divide resume sections. This makes it easier for readers to find what they're looking for. ✅ Bullet point length: No more than 2 lines of text Bullet points that are 3 lines or more are visually more exhausting to read and risk getting skipped over. ✅ Accomplishment-oriented bullet points Replace "job description-y" bullet points with ones that highlight a specific project, a measurable result, or a clear outcome. Include WHAT you did, HOW much, and WHY it mattered. ✅ 2-5 bullet points per position Any less and I'm asking "why is this position here." Any more and run the risk of people not reading them all. More relevant roles should have 4-5. ✅ Right justified dates Keep your employment dates aligned along the right margin. It's easier to scan down the side of your resume and see the timeline of your career. ✅ Skills-sections at the bottom, if at all Reserve skills sections for technical skills (software programs, languages, systems, etc.). If all your skills section says is stuff like Communication, Problem Solving, and MS Office, you can get rid of it entirely. ✅ One-page or two-page is fine Either is okay so long as you're not getting too cramped or too fluffy. 10+ years of experience tends to start needing a second page, but if you can keep to one, that's great too. ✅ PDF format Always share your resume as a PDF to ensure the formatting doesn't get messed up if someone opens it using a different word processor. Include both your name and the word "resume" in the file name. What are some of your go-to resume best practices in 2025?

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