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April 19, 2017 12:55 pm

How to Effectively List Professional Skills on Your Resume

Bar tending, Writing, Python, Bookkeeping, Crocheting, what
do these things have in common?

These are all skills, not all of which are worth listing in
your resume.

Employers call applicants for an interview only when their
resume matches the specific skill set they need. Padding your resume with a
bunch of skills, as impressive as it looks, won’t help your application if
those skills aren’t related to the job. 

In this article, I explain the different types of
skills that are relevant, and how to select which of those skills to include in your
resume skills section. I also cover how to list skills on a resume so it stands out and fits the job your applying to best. 

What skills should you list in your resume skills section
What skills should you list in your resume skills section? (graphic source)

Listing the right professional skills on your resume is important, let's begin by looking at why that is:

What is a Resume Skills Section? Why is it Important?

Having a section dedicated to an applicant’s skills makes
it easy for recruiters to check qualifications quickly. For candidates, it’s another
opportunity to add keywords and highlight their skills, in case the recruiter
didn’t read through their professional history.

The resume skills section is often listed after the professional
experience section, but some resume templates have the skill section at a
separate column on the left or right-hand side of the document. 

Some candidates group their skills according to the main
responsibilities of their job, as shown here: 

Resume skills organized by type
Skills section of a resume example, from Michelle Riklan, Certified Resume Writer and Managing Director at Riklan Resources LLC.

 2 Major Types of Skills to Put on a Resume



There are different kinds of skills for your resume, but the two main types
are hard skills and soft skills. 











1. Hard Skills to Put on a Resume









Hard skills are quantifiable and often learned from school
or on the job. Operating machinery, programming languages, designing graphics,
SEO, data analysis are all hard skills.



2. Soft Skills to Put on a Resume

Soft skills, also known as 'people skills' are subjective,
that’s why it’s harder to quantify. For instance, an applicant’s definition of
good communication skills’ might not
match equal what an employer is looking for. Public speaking, communication,
patience, decision making and conflict resolution are all soft skills.

Use Both Types of Skills on Your Resume



Both are important to include in the skills section of a professional resume. These skill types can be categorized as transferrable or
job-specific. 

As the name implies, job-specific skills are required for a
particular job, while transferrable skills are relevant in different industries
and roles. For example, an animator has 3D modeling, time management, and
communication skills. 3D modeling won’t be useful after changing careers, but
the remaining skills might be useful despite switching to a programming or
sales job. 



Hard or Soft Skills: Which Is More
Important in a Great Resume?



Logic suggests hard skills are more important. The answer
isn’t so simple.



In a tough economy, applicants with hard skills are hired
quicker because employers think they can do the job with little or no training.



In a niche or competitive market, applicants with
sought-after skills are prioritized. This happened before when iOS apps were
gaining popularity and companies scrambled to fight over limited talent supply.
It’s happening again now that Facebook, Google, and other tech companies are
fighting over candidates with machine learning expertise.



In industries where the supply of talent is plenty,
employers prefer applicant with developed soft skills, arguing that soft skills
aren’t easily learned.



The 2015 Job
Outlook report
of the National Association of Colleges and Employers (NACE)
included a survey of 260 organizations that revealed the top skills they value
in applicants. 

Nace Survey results showing skills employers seek
Nace: Survey results, showing the top skills employers seek.

Noticed something? The top five are all soft skills.
Leadership and teamwork tie at 77.8%, while written communication skills come in
second at 73.4%. Surprisingly, creativity—a common buzzword in resume and
LinkedIn profiles comes last at 18.2%.

“Don’t
forget, employers don’t recruit on practical ability alone, they also consider
cultural fit,” says Sarah Dowzell
of Natural HR.

How to List Skills on Your Resume: 5 Quick and Easy Tips 

Let's narrow down how to list skills on a resume so that it makes it's way through resume tracking software, stands out professionally, and catches the eye of potential employers. Here are a few quick resume skills section tips to keep in mind:



















  1. Use Job-Specific Skills on Your Resume - Only write job-specific skills
    currently used and recognized in your job. Don’t bother including old
    programming languages and old machinery, as it makes you look out of touch with
    current trends.


  2. Limit Your List to Only Include Applicable Skills - A skill section’s goal is to convince
    an employer that you can do the job, not every task imaginable. Write only the
    skills relevant for the job.


  3. Organize Your Skills into Categories - Divide skills into major
    categories related to the position. For example, a web developer’s skillset
    could be divided into programming languages, software, design, and soft
    skills. 


  4. Include Relevant Synonyms - Use synonyms and different phrases
    used for your skills. For instance, social media marketing also goes by SMM,
    and can sometimes refer to specific platforms, such as Facebook marketing, or
    Pinterest marketing.


  5. List Your Important Skills a Few Times - Recruiters also use skills as
    keywords for Applicant Tracking Software (ATS) searches, so it’s important your
    skills are listed a few times in your resume, such as in the professional
    summary and work experience. An ATS can count how frequently a keyword appears,
    and then rank the applications according to which resume contains the most
    keywords.

How to Write Soft Skills on Your Resume

Show, don’t tell. That’s the important rule in making your
soft skills believable for a recruiter. 

Use numbers, awards, and any other
quantifiable metric to make the recruiter see your claims of being a good team
player and communicator are real.

Let's look at a few helpful examples:


1. Time Management and Teamwork



“Coordinated with 3 animators to successfully complete
a 30-second video animation project before deadline.”




2. Initiative and Interpersonal Skills



“Organized different team building activities to
improve morale after a company merger.”




3. Communication and Leadership Skills



“Managed a team of volunteers and sponsors to schedule
activities, pack giveaways, and conduct a successful community outreach
campaign.”



How to Write Hard Skills on Your Resume

Hard skills are often transferable and job specific skills
that a recruiter would input in an ATS. Here’s an example of hard skills for an
editor or copywriter:

Example of listing hard skills on your resume
From Wendi M. Weiner, Certified Executive Resume Writer and Career Coach at Writing Guru

1. Show Quantifiable Evidence of Your Skills

Taylor Dumouchel, Career Expert at Peak Sales Recruiting
says,



“Top performers in the business and finance sectors
understand exactly how their efforts contribute to the company’s bottom line,
so a top resume should also include the metrics that quantify their efforts."



2. Remove Unnecessary Jargon From Your Resume

"The hard skills you write should be recognizable to the
company or audience who will review your resume", says Kristen McAlister of Cerius Executives.

For example, a specific program you used at your old job
might be unheard of to your new boss, so you should replace it with a generic
name to describe what the application does instead. 

Customer service and phone
sales agents, for example, use software specific to the company they work for.
Instead of naming the sales software, it’s better to write lead management
application or customer database application.

3. Rate Your Hard Skills With a Clear Metric

Using numbers to rate your skills might sound good, but it
doesn’t clearly convey your skill level.

On a 10-point scale with 10 being the highest, what is
seven? To you, it might mean that you’re ‘proficient’
in that skill, but what if the recruiter thinks ‘proficient’ is more of an eight or nine?

Use an easily understood metric such as:



  • Beginner - You can handle the basic features of the program, but you
    can’t do complicated tricks or troubleshoot problems yet.


  • Intermediate - You can also troubleshoot and do some fancy tricks.
    But you might need to Google some functions or ask in forums from time to time.


  • Proficient - You’re not yet an expert, but you can handle advanced functions and troubleshoot problems by examining things on your own. You don’t
    need a manual.


  • Expert - You know the program like the back of your hand. You know
    of obscure features, tricks, and weird problems, so much so that other people
    often come to you for help.

4. Order Hard Skills on Your Resume Logically

Let's look at how to list skills on a resume in the right order. 

Some jobs require more technical skills than others, like
nursing, engineering, video animation, and programming. For jobs like this,
it’s important that your skills are listed in a logical manner.

Here’s how to list compute skills on a resume without making
it look like a laundry list of jargon:

Option 1. List Your Skills In Order of Relevance

List the job-specific skills most relevant
to your target job then move on to the secondary or routine skills expected.
This layout makes it easy for recruiters to see that you have the skills
required on the job description.

Option 2. Categorize Them by Type of Skill

Hard skills can be categorized in different ways,
depending on your job title. Below is an example of how graphic designers can
group their skills:



  • Design Skills - Layouts, typography, drawing, sketching


  • Design Software - Illustrator, InDesign, and Photoshop


  • Additional Skills - Skills useful for designers, but not directly
    related to their current niche. For example, CSS and Web Development are good secondary
    skills for a print layout artist.

Option 3. Place Them In Order of Experience

List hard skills followed by the years of
experience. Listing your skills in this fashion shows your career’s
progression. 

Where to Place Skills on Your Resume

Have you noticed how some resume skills sections have the skills listed as
a separate column on the right hand side, while others list it below their
professional summary?

There’s no such thing as right and wrong placement, it just
depends on your goal. That said, the recruiters and resume experts I talked to
have varying but equally logical opinions on this subject.

1. Place Skills after the Professional Summary

“Write
your skills below the professional summary because the top one-third of the
resume is the prime real estate. Since resumes are only read for five to seven
seconds, you want your key skills to grab the employer’s attention early,”
says Weiner.

2. Consider Whether or Not to Use Side Columns

Dr. Dawn D. Boyer of Dboyer Consulting advises against
using templates with text blocks, double-line spacing, side columns, and other
creative but problematic layouts.

She continues, “An ATS takes the text it finds and parses it over into
data blocks for future searches. Resumes with text boxes, fancy graphics,
tables, and weird columns may confuse the ATS system, which can lead it to mix
up the text, or ignore it totally.”

According to her, it’s also the reason why putting your
information only in the header or footer is a bad idea. ATS often can’t
recognize text embedded in headers, so your contact details won’t be included
on your application.

3. Place Your Skills Depending on Job Requirements

“If
technical skills are required for the position, I list them after the
professional summary then include soft skills in a separate section labeled ‘Areas
of Strength’ below it”, says Dr.
Heather Rothbauer-Wanish of Feather Communications.

So the Order Is


  1. Professional Summary

  2. Technical Skills 

  3. Soft Skills.

For professional jobs where the hard skills are standard and often
transferrable to a lot of positions, Dr. Rothbauer-Wanish lists them at the
bottom of the resume. Examples of these common hard skills are sales and online
research.

Not sure how to structure your resume? Check out this guide.

You can also find sleek and simple resume templates here:

6 Lists of Skills to Put on a Resume (Organized by Type and Job Function)

Here are lists of professional skills for resumes, which you can use to write your resume skills section with—from business skills to technical skills to include on your resume: 

























1. General Soft Skills


  • Written and verbal communication

  • Teamwork

  • Openness to feedback

  • Initiative

  • Meeting deadlines

  • Problem solving

  • Public speaking

  • Time management

2. Management Soft Skills


  • Team management

  • Mentoring

  • Writing reports and proposals

  • Coordinating cross-functional
    events

3. Hard Skills: Design


  • Photoshop

  • 3D Modeling

  • Print Layout

  • Typography

  • Maya

4. Resume Technical Skills: Programming


  • Programming Languages: C++,
    Python,

  • Operating Systems: Linux, Mac OS
    X, Windows 8, Ubuntu

  • Data analysis

  • iOS app development

  • Troubleshooting

  • Android development

  • Process improvement

  • Technical documentation

5. Hard Skills: Online Marketing


  • Facebook marketing


  • Video marketing

  • Link building

  • Google analytics

  • Majestic SEO

  • Content writing

  • Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

  • Influencer marketing

6. Business Skills for a Resume


  • Accounting

  • Bookkeeping

  • Project Management

  • MS Excel

  • Shorthand

  • SQL

  • Human resources

  • Talent management

  • Technical recruiting

Show Off What You Can Do…But Not Everything

Conserve space on your resume and write only the skills related to the job
opening you're applying to. Remember, every skill you include in your resume skills section comes with an opportunity-cost for
that space—and attention span of the hiring manager. Now that you know how to list skills on a resume for best results, and what technical and soft skills are important to include, you're ready to take action.


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