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June 18, 2020 01:37 pm GMT

10 Data-Driven Ways to Use Your Developer Resume to Get Interviews

Now, with the job market evolving extremely rapidly, writing an effective resume has become both an art and a science. Some companies are continuing to hire. However, others have had to reduce their workforce, like Airbnb, in addition to an increasing number of businesses shifting to remote workpermanently. That being said, the demand for tech talent remains high.

Based on data from over 30,000 developer resumes analyzed by CV Compiler, (an automated tech resume reviewer), here are ways to upgrade that should lead to getting more job interviews:

You Want to Make Your Resume Stand-Out From the Rest

1) Stay away from resume templates that are available to anyone on the web. Your resume should look unique, thus ensuring more than a cursory glance.

2) Make your resume sound like a person wrote it, not a machine. Write as you would talk. Make it engaging and enjoyable to read, both for you and your potential employer. Incorporate some interesting, work-related facts about yourself. For instance:

Covered 2M lines of code with unit tests since 2017


3) Wherever possible, back up your accomplishments with numbers: e.g., improved app performance by 40%, achieved 300k plug-in downloads in a span of 3 months, reduced page load time from 20 seconds to 5 seconds, and the like. Listing your achievements will highlight your ability to deliver results.

Back in 2014, Googles former SVP of People Operations Laszlo Bock offered the perfect formula for listing your accomplishments in a measurable, impactful way:

Accomplished [X] as measured by [Y] by doing [Z].


Despite having been in tech recruitment since 2008, Ive rarely seen this while reviewing developer resumes, testifying that backing up your accomplishments with numbers is a surefire way to differentiate your resume from your competition.

4) Enrich descriptions of the things youve done with power words, making your descriptions much more compelling. Here are some excellent options, handpicked from over 1,000 software engineering job listings published on Relocate.me, AngelList, Indeed, and similar websites:

automated, complex, concurrent, core, distributed, fault-tolerant, fully responsive, highly available, large-scale, maintainable, multi-threaded, reliable, resilient, resource-intensive, reusable, robust, scalable, secure


5) Personalize your resume with a short cover letter that shows you care and know the company youre applying to, and, as IDEOs former Director of Talent Virginia Martinez notes in one of her blog posts, ...what matters most is that you show a little personality. After all, we want to hire you, not your resume.

You Want Your Resume to Be Competitive

6) Dont overly detail your history; your resume is a marketing tool, not a bio. Yet at the same time, you dont want it to be too short. Give the recruiter/hiring manager what theyre looking fora brief overview of your relevant skills, knowledge, experience, and achievements.

7) Write a pithy summary or write no summary at allno soft skills or buzzwords. Adding passionate, proactive, good team player, results-driven, hard worker, and other cliched resume words serves little purpose, as recruiters see them in virtually every resume/summary section.

The experience and accomplishments you add to your resume should showcase that youre a hard worker, so theres no need to add hard worker to your resume.


Describe what makes you unique and sets you apart in 3-4 sentences.

8) Incorporate relevant keywords, especially those listed in the vacancy, throughout your entire resume. This is essential in getting past the initial resume screening.

9) Show your passion by mentioning your open-source projects, providing a link to your active tech blog. You can also include a link to your stunning GitHub, Stack Overflow, or HackerRank profile.

10) Dont describe your responsibilities. List your accomplishments and achievements. Start each with a strong action verb: e.g., automated, improved, developed, re-engineered, implemented, achieved, reduced, and so on. Use the right verb tense for past and current positions. Using bullet points makes it easier to read and assess.

Last but not least, include a link to your LinkedIn profile so a recruiter or hiring manager can verify you are who you claim to be.

Of course, resume expectations vary wildly, depending on the country, the company, and the recruiter/hiring manager perusing your dev resume. However, I do believe the preceding tips will help transform your resume from ordinary to attention-grabbing, helping you land, if not a job at your dream company, then at least a slew of promising job interviews.


Original Link: https://dev.to/stetsenko_me/10-data-driven-ways-to-use-your-developer-resume-to-get-interviews-e3g

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