text
stringclasses 1
value |
---|
TECH
RESUME
GUIDE
Software
engineers
know
that
there
is
no
one
fit-size
solution
for
anything.
Be
that
developing
a
website,
solving
an
algorithm,
or
designing
an
architecture.
While
this
guide
promises
to
deliver
great
content
to
help
you
ace
a
job
interview,
it
doesn’t
guarantee
a
job
upfront
or
a
recruiter
call
every
time.
There
are
plenty
of
factors
that
contribute
to
job
hunting.
While
few
are
in
hands,
few
aren’t.
It’s
that
dead
simple.
So
what
are
the
factors
that
you
need
to
take
care
of?
There
are
plenty
of
factors
that
contribute
to
job
hunting.
While
few
are
in
hands,
few
aren’t.
It’s
that
dead
simple.
Skills
You
must
have
relevant
skills
to
apply
for
a
specific
job.
Experience
Some
industry
experience
can
make
your
resume
stand
out
more.
Communication
You
should
at
least
communicate
well
in
English
(as
its
international
language),
if
not
a
fluent
speaker.
Then
what
are
the
factors
you
can’t
control?
Position
The
position
might
have
already
been
fulfilled—without
you
knowing
about
it.
Competition
You
might
have
a
strong
resume
with
great
expertise,
but
someone
might
have
more
than
you
to
impress
the
recruiter.
Especially
after
Covid-19,
you
will
have
to
compete
worldwide—if
applying
for
remote
work.
Location
Although
most
of
the
jobs
are
remote
these
days,
people
who
are
near
or
don’t
need
to
relocate
are
preferred
by
hiring
staff.
SeniorityCertain
companies
only
look
for
specific
seniority
roles.
If
you
are
just
starting
or
have
less
than
a
few
years
of
experience,
you’re
likely
to
be
overlooked.
Luck
Luck
always
plays
a
role,
take
it
or
not.
To
make
it
less
of
a
factor,
you
can
go
for
referrals.
(In
the
following
chapters,
I
will
share
the
tips
on
how
to
get
a
good
referral).
Now
you
know
what
it
takes
to
be
ready
for
a
job/role.
Let’s
move
on
to
writing
a
resume
than
can
sell
you
for
the
position
you
have
been
applying
for.
A
great
resume:
Showcases
rare
and
valuable
skills
that
are
exactly
what
the
job
needs.
It’s
built
on
years
of
experience
you
gathered
that
makes
you
stand
out
from
the
crowd.
It
shows
a
solid
progression
throughout
your
journey.
You
take
upon
new
roles/challenges/responsibilities
and
are
not
afraid
of
learning
new
things.
Remember
that
preparation
and
persistence
will
make
a
difference.
One
without
the
other
is
an
invitation
to
rejection.
To
get
your
dream
job,
you
have
to
do
the
hard
work.
Staying
positive,
focused,
and
creative
will
help
you
climb
the
staircase
of
victory.
How
to
be
a
Kickass
New
Software
Engineer
guide
(If
you
get
a
page
not
found,
log
into
your
linkedin
account
first)
Keep
looking
for
some
inspirations
or
stories
about
how
people
went
from
ground
zero
to
software
heroes.
It
will
not
just
boost
your
morale
but
also
guide
you
like
a
map.
You
know,
one
can
learn
a
lot
from
other
experiences.
Now
we
understand
what
it
takes
before
creating
a
resume
it’s
time
to
write
that
resume.How
do
you
write
a
good
developer
resume?
These
are
some
essential
points
that
you
must
take
into
consideration
while
writing
your
resume:
1.
Years
of
Experience:
How
long
have
you
been
working?
The
recruiter
will
check
your
education
and
year
of
passing
to
calculate
how
long
it
has
been
for
you?
They
will
internally
match
these
years
with
the
years
of
experience
they
need.
They
will
also
evaluate
you
with
other
candidates.
The
more
experience
you
have,
the
more
are
your
chances
of
getting
into
the
*Yes
pile*
of
resumes.
If
you
make
this
info
hard
to
find,
you
might
end
up
in
the
*Reject
pile*.
Make
sure
to
provide
transparent
information.
2.
Relevant
Technologies:
How
much
relevant
experience
do
you
have?
E.g.
If
you’re
applying
for
a
Frontend
role
and
know
a
little
of
backend
stuff,
recruiters
will
prioritize
you
over
other
applicants
that
only
know
frontend.
3.
Work
Experience:
How
much
relevant
work
experience
do
you
have?
Do
you
come
across
as
someone
who
has
consistently
delivered
the
impact?
Don’t
misunderstand
the
work
experience
with
the
year
of
experience.
While
the
year
of
experience
is
the
time
you
have
spent
so
far,
the
work
experience
is
the
impact
you
have
delivered
in
the
entire
industry.
You
might
have
solved
a
complex
problem
in
your
job/internship
or
even
a
freelance
project.
Be
that
building
a
highly
secure
API,
catchy
frontend
website,
or
marvelous
UI/UX
architecture.
It's
all
measured
in
your
work
experience.
Another
awesome
thing
you
can
include
in
this
is
your
open-source
work.
Have
you
contributed
to
any
open-source
project
which
is
famous
and
widely
used?4.
Ground
Rules:
We
need
to
follow
a
few
things
to
write
a
professional
resume.
Make
sure
your
resume
follows
these
traditional
points:
Good
grammar
and
No
typos
Your
resume
represents
you.
It
has
to
be
the
best.
If
you
allow
typos
or
poor
grammar,
it
will
reflect
your
personality
carelessly—someone
who
doesn’t
pay
attention
to
details
or
doesn't
have
a
good
command
of
the
language.
Use
free
spell-checking
tools
and
grammar
checking
tools
such
as
Grammarly.
Even
better
is
to
ask
people
to
re-read
your
resume.
Basic
contact
details"
Include
your
email
address
and
relevant
contact
information,
like
phone
number,
city
&
country
where
you
live,
at
the
top.
Keep
it
short.
You
don’t
have
to
add
your
full
address
or
other
unnecessary
details.
Dates
in
reverse
chronological
order"
Point
your
work
and
education
experiences
with
precise
dates.
List
them
from
the
latest
on
the
top
to
earlier
ones
underneath
it.
Don’t
include
photos
or
non-required
personal
information.
Many
people
make
this
mistake.
Including
photos
or
personal
information,
like
date
of
birth,
relationship
status,
and
religion,
creates
bias.
It’s
about
your
skills
and
not
looks.
Two
Pages
or
less"
It’s
not
a
strict
rule,
but
wise
to
follow.
If
you’re
a
fresh
grad
or
someone
with
1
-
2
years
of
experience,
it’s
not
expected
from
you
to
fill
two
pages.
A
one-page
resume
is
enough
here.
You
can
go
for
a
two-page
resume
if
you
have
ample
work
experience
that
counts.
Still,
the
max
limit
should
be
two
pages.
Recruiters
don’t
have
time
to
go
through
your
3-5
page
resume
in
a
pile
of
100+
resumes.
5.
Simplicity
and
ConsistencyResumes
that
are
simple,
concise,
and
easy
to
read
will
be
read
more.
Writing
well
is
an
underrated
skill
in
a
resume.
Clear,
neat,
and
consistent
formatting:
Use
the
same
formatting,
font
size,
and
font
family
throughout
the
resume.
It
helps
for
a
smooth
read.
Bullet
points
Short
sentences
with
bullet
points
are
easier
to
read
over
long,
overly
verbose
paragraphs.
Bullets
points
are
easy
to
scan
for
recruiters.
They
are
used
to
it.
Avoid
sub-bullet
points.
It
clutters
your
resume,
making
it
harder
to
read.
Avoid
dashes
(-)
for
bullet
points
too.
It
looks
out
of
place
and
doesn’t
stand
out
well
at
first
glance
over
bullet
points.
Date
formats
Format
like
08/07
-
20/12
is
hard
to
understand.
The
reviewer
has
to
think
over
the
date,
“Oh,
it’s
from
the
8th
of
2007
to
the
20th
of
2012”.
The
year
is
not
differentiated
from
the
date.
Instead,
directly
use
the
standard
format
—
August
2007
-
December
2012.
Easy
to
read
in
seconds.
Don’t
forget
to
stick
with
the
same
format
throughout
the
resume.
Resume
format
Do
not,
I
repeat,
do
not
send
any
format
other
than
PDF.
Formats
like
.doc,
.rtf
display
content
inconsistently
on
different
machines.
What
you
see
might
differ
from
what
the
recruiter
sees.
You
don’t
know
reviewers/recruiters’
machine
specifications,
do
you?
Other
Information
Avoid
that
trivial
info
that
doesn’t
bring
value
to
your
resume.
If
you
have
something
important
that
can
help
you
stand
out,
e.g.,
your
school
&
achievements,
maybe
you
presented
as
a
leader
of
your
batch
in
your
college,
or
that
university
competition—both
technical
and
non-technical
(sports),
add
it
at
the
end
of
the
resume.After
the
generalized
points
of
the
resume
comes
its
structure.
Let’s
understand
how
to
structure
a
resume:
There
are
two
types
of
software
developers:
one
who
had
their
first
job
and
one
looking
to
land
a
job.
You’ll
want
to
structure
your
resume
differently
depending
on
who
you
are.
For
those
who
had
a
job,
your
work
experience,
professional
skills,
and
the
technologies
you
worked
in
that
company
matter
on
your
resume.
While
for
the
new
grad,
it’s
their
internship,
open-source
contribution,
or
a
personal
project
that
helps
them
jump
out
of
the
crowd.
When
you’re
a
student
or
new
grad,
you
often
feel
you
have
little
to
no
experience
to
show.
Even
though
that’s
the
case,
you
can
always
make
the
most
of
what
you
have.
Start
building
personal
projects.
Go
for
some
freelancing
projects.
Apply
for
internships.
You
can
do
anything
as
you’re
just
starting!
Here
are
the
experiences
that
catch
the
eyes
of
people
reviewing
your
resume
the
most,
in
priority
order:
1.
Real-world
work
software
development
experience
If
you
have/had
been
working
as
a
part-time
or
full-time
developer,
list
it
and
your
achievements.
Show
how
you
delivered
and
progressed
in
your
career.
2.
Internships
You
can
attract
attention
with
the
internships
on
your
resume.
But
don’t
forget
that
there
will
be
many
people
with
internships
while
applying
to
large
tech
companies.
Specify
your
contribution
and
results
from
the
internships.
3.
Open
Source
Projects
If
you
have
created
a
project
with
many
contributors,
show
it
off.
If
you
contribute
to
a
certain
open-source
project
frequently,
show
it
off.
If
you
have
taken
part
&
contributed
as
an
open-source
contributor
in
any
organization,
show
it
off.
If
you
are
not
in
any
of
these
categories,
it's
time
to
do
something.
Find
a
project,
join
an
organization
or
create
something
on
your
own.
4.
School/College
Details
Especially
if
you
have
attended
a
highly
prestigious
school/college
and
have
high
grades,
this
can
be
a
remarkable
addon.5.
Projects
Have
you
built
any
project
which
has
some
great
functionalities?
Do
you
have
something
that
can
show
the
impact
or
metrics
of
your
Project?
You
can
list
your
creative,
complex
projects
in
the
projects
section
of
your
resume.
Link
the
source
code
on
Github
with
a
good
README
.
6.
Tutoring
or
Leadership:
Have
you
been
some
part
of
NGOs
where
you
taught
some
programming?
Or
you
might
have
taken
upon
leadership
in
your
college
where
you
led
your
batch.
Anything
that
you
have
collaboratively
done
to
do
a
project
or
teaching.
It
shows
your
team's
skills
&
proficiency
in
the
field.
Don’t
miss
adding
that.
A
new
grad
resume
structure:
1.
Experience
2.
Projects
3.
Education
&
Certification
4.
Languages
&
Technologies
5.
Interests
Fit
all
these
on
one
page.
As
you
have
more
working
experience,
a
second
page
will
make
sense.
How
can
new
grads
and
interns
grab
the
attention
of
recruiters?
Sebastian
Prieto
Tovar
and
Claire
Taylor
have
recruited
hundreds
of
students
and
interns
for
Uber
and
other
tech
companies.
Here’s
the
advice
they
have
for
people
starting:
We
always
tell
students
to
read
the
job
description,
then
amend
their
resume
accordingly.
And
reach
out
directly
to
the
recruiter
when
you
can.
We
look
for
your
studies,
relevant
courses,
and
what
you’re
best
at
with
studies
on
a
resume.
We
also
care
about
extracurricular
activities,
hackathons,
working
in
teams
outside
school,
apps,
websites,
and
other
cool
things
you
created
outside
school.
Do
spend
plenty
of
time
preparing
for
the
interviews
themselves.
Read
about
the
company,
watch
the
videos,
learn
about
the
culture,
read
stories
about
employees,
and
understand
the
job
description.
Work
Experience
structure:
1.
Work
Experience
at
or
near
the
top
of
the
page
Your
current
title,
company,
and
past
few
years
of
experience2.
Have
a
Languages
and
Technologies
section
on
the
first
page.
List
things
you
are
an
expert
or,
at
the
very
least,
proficient
at
in
order.
Mention
the
languages
and
frameworks
that
the
job
description
mentions.
Don’t
bother
listing
non-relevant
technologies
like
Jira
or
Trello.
3.
If
you
have
spent
a
long
time
at
one
workplace.List
key
projects
you
developed
and
shipped.
You
would
like
to
mention
roles
or
responsibilities
you
take
upon
promotion,
if
any.
It
shows
progression.
Write
all
these
in
a
new
sub-work
section.
4.
Education
details
It
becomes
less
important
as
you
progress
in
your
career.
If
you
have
less
than
1-3
years
of
experience,
it’s
good
to
go
with.
With
more
experience,
you
would
like
to
focus
more
on
work
experience
than
past
education
details.
5.
Certifications
List
the
relevant
certification
related
to
the
job
industry
below
the
work
experience.
Make
sure
these
certifications
show
some
quality.
Trivial
certification,
like
LinkedIn
certification,
doesn’t
add
significance.
6.
Projects
The
more
experience
you
have,
the
less
relevant
outside-work
projects
tend
to
become.
List
only
those
projects
that
are
outstanding
in
the
extra
curriculum
section.
7.
Interests
Point
out
a
few
things
that
interest
you
to
make
the
resume
more
“human.”
Keep
it
short.
As
a
rule
of
thumb,
avoid
listing
your
expertise
level.
Instead,
list
only
languages
you
feel
proficient
with,
and
list
your
most
vital
languages
and
technologies
first.
There
is
a
special
section
that
has
gained
different
opinions
from
different
people.
Guess?
Yes,
it's
the
summary
section!
Do
you
need
to
have
a
summary
section?
Many
resumes
start
with
a
summary
or
profile
section
at
the
top.
Here
is
a
thing:
recruiters
or
hiring
people
barely
read
this
section
at
first
scan.
They
only
do
so
when
they
have
decided
to
proceed
with
your
application.
For
less
experienced
candidates,
it’s
not
wise
to
have
this
section
unless
you
customize
it
for
job
listing,
showing
how
a
great
fit
you
are!
So,
where
the
summary
section
can
be
helpful?
Senior/Standout
profile:
Describe
your
motivation,
what
you’re
looking
for,
and
your
year
of
experience.
Remote
position:
If
you’re
looking
for
a
fully
remote
position,
the
summary
section
comes
in
handy.
You
can
clarify
that
in
the
section.
Role
change:
If
you
are
someone
from
a
non-technical
background
who
wants
to
switch
to
a
technical
career,
having
a
summary
specifying
your
motto
will
be
very
helpful.
So
if
you
decide
to
go
with
it,
make
sure
your
summary
section
isn’t
too
short
or
too
long.
So
far,
we
have
talked
about
the
resume's
general
part
and
its
structure.
Let’s
focus
on
the
crucial
part
of
a
resume,
i.e.,
Work
Experience.How
to
stand
out
from
the
rest
with
your
work
impact?
While
listing
your
work
and
projects,
focus
on
what
you
achieved
instead
of
what
you
did.
You
want
to
convey
that
you’re
self-sufficient
and
that
your
work
has
impacted
the
team
&
then
the
company.
You’re
well
aware
of
your
valuable
contribution.
But
how
to
stand
out?
There
is
a
simple
formula
that
Google
recommends:
Accomplished
[X]
as
measured
by
[Y]
by
doing
[Z]
Effective
resumes
should
contain
two
things:
Responsibilities
and
Accomplishments.
To
stand
out
from
the
crowd,
you
must
point
out
how
you
consciously
and
proactively
added
value
through
your
work.
Edit
your
achievements
with
these
points:
1.
User
Numbers
Quantify
your
impact
wherever
you
can.
Instead
of
saying,
“Built
a
tool
widely
adopted
by
the
company,”
say,
“Led
a
team
of
3
developers
to
build
a
dependency
injection
framework
adopted
by
15
teams
and
all
50+
developers
at
the
company.”
Numbers
can
be
anything:
Number
of
people
on
your
team"
lines
of
code"
code
coverage
percentage
before
and
after"
number
of
users"
number
of
installs"
ratings
2.
Use
active
language
Show
what
you
have
done
and
how
you
have
been
proactive.
Use
active
verbs
like
“led,”
“managed,”
“improved,”
“developed,”
and
“rolled
out.”
3.
Specific
languages
&
technologie
Mentioning
technologies
in
your
work
experience
is
powerful.
Ensure
these
technologies
overlap
with
the
languages
and
technologies
you
mentioned
in
the
standalone
section.
4.
Keyword
stuffing
Resume
filtering
is
done
by
discarding
resumes
that
don’t
have
specific
keywords.
A
workaround
is
to
read
the
job
description
and
pick
all
the
necessary
keywords.
An
excellent
way
to
keep
these
keywords
without
losing
professionalism
is
to
structure
them
in
the
“languages
and
technicals”
section,
where
you
list
technologies
you’re
familiar
with
or
relevant
to
a
job.
When
it
comes
to
technical
experiences,
some
people
falsely
state
things.
Some
might
even
shy
away.
Don’t
claim
untrue
things,
but
do
aim
to
paint
a
great
picture
of
yourself.
Here
are
a
few
tips
for
you:
1.
Talk
about
yourself,
not
your
team.
Avoid
using
“we.”
The
resume
is
about
you
and
not
your
team.
The
hiring
team
wants
you!
Always
use
the
first-person
approach.
In
most
cases,
you
can
drop
the
“I.”
2.
Be
concise
but
not
humble
and
don’t
hide
your
achievements.
When
in
doubt,
inflating
them
on
the
borderline
will
hurt
less
than
hiding
them.
You
never
know
how
these
small,
impactful
achievements
can
help
you
stand
out
from
the
competitive
crowd.3.
Side
projects
&
Open
Source
contribution
Mention
these
in
your
project
section
with
the
impact-result
contribution
model.
Provide
GitHub
source
code
links
with
a
proper
explanation
of
how
your
project
works.
Create
nice
READMEs
containing
project
details
with
the
installation
process.
4.
Extracurricular
activites.
Do
talk
about
these
activities
at
the
end
of
the
section.
Maybe
you’re
a
technical
writer
or
content
creator
on
social
media—
mention
it.
Provide
two
links
to
your
popular
article.
Showing
off
high-quality
or
standout
activities
can
make
a
good
resume
even
better.
5.
Mention
your
learning.
Learning
new
and
valuable
skills
proactively
is
a
positive
trait
that
hiring
managers
appreciate.
Do
mention
if
you
picked
a
technology
to
speed
up
a
project,
gain
knowledge,
or
stretch
yourself.
6.
Don’t
highlight
negatives
You
don’t
need
to
list
things
that
don’t
show
you
in
a
good
book.
Avoid
mentioning
failed
projects,
low
GPA,
CGPA
scores,
etc.
Remove
items
that
don’t
convey
you’re
a
good
fit
for
the
role.
We
have
mostly
covered
what
should
go
on
a
resume.
Yet
people
make
some
trivial
mistakes.
What
are
these?
Let’s
check
that
out!
Common
Mistakes
1.
Creating
hard
to
scan
resumes:
Multi-column
resumes
are
hard
to
scan
for
managers.
Simple
formats
are
better.
Go
utmost
for
a
two-column
layout.
2.
Too
much
bolding
A
resume
should
have
minor
and
consistent
bolding
for
critical
parts,
such
as
dates,
titles,
and
companies.
Don’t
bold
random
parts
that
don’t
make
sense
at
all.
3.
Flashy
resumes
A
developer's
resume
is
95%
about
the
content
and
5%
about
the
style.
It
works
if
you’re
applying
for
a
UI/UX
role
as
it's
more
about
style
with
creativity.
4.
Inconsistent
formatting
Pay
attention
to
the
fine
details.
Keep
everything
consistent.
5.
Sloppy
phrases
Avoid
unprofessional
language.
Don’t
use
etc.,
so
on,
etc.
6.
Using
internal
acronyms
and
jargon
Avoid
using
internal
project
names
that
people
outside
the
company
don’t
understand.
E.g.,
“I
did
FD
in
aplha2.0
project”.
A
recruiter
can’t
guess
what
your
FD
is
in
aplha2.0.
7.
Not
reflecting
on
the
job
and
not
tailoring
the
resume
for
the
position
Say
if
you
know
both
frontend
and
backend
but
applying
for
a
specific
frontend
role.
You
will
want
to
present
yourself
as
someone
who
knows
the
front
end
enough.
Backend
is
a
sidekick
here.
Always
keep
the
job
position
in
mind,
then
tailor
your
resume.
8.
Using
cliches
over
statements
backed
by
evidence
What
does
the
following
sentence
tell
you
about
you?
“I
am
a
team
player
and
a
fast
learner
who
can
hit
the
ground
running.”
From
the
point
of
view
of
the
recruiter,
it
doesn't
provide
anyinformation.
It’s
not
backed
by
any
fact
or
evidence
that
can
state
it.
Let
your
actions
speak
for
themselves
9.
Being
too
verbose
Avoid
blocks
of
text
or
long
sentences.
It
doesn’t
help
for
an
easy
read.Keep
it
short
and
up
to
the
point
10.
Unnecessary
details
Do
not
add
photos
or
irrelevant
contact
information.
If
not
needed
or
not
in
the
job's
context,
do
not
mention
spoken
languages.
Most
companies
will
only
care
about
your
proficiency
in
English.
11.
Self-rating
your
skill
level
Do
not
rate
your
proficiency
in
any
language
or
technology
using
percentages
or
scores.
It’s
not
necessary .
No
one
knows
anything
about
a
programming
language/technology .
12.
Non-clickable
or
full
links
Cross
verify
if,
by
mistake,
you
have
added
non-clickable
links.
Add
proper
links
to
GitHub,
websites,
and
other
media.
Recruiters
will
not
copy-paste
the
name/username
to
see
it.
Make
clickable
links
and
hide
the
full
URL
behind
a
name
that
describes
what
the
link
is
for.
13.
StaleLinking
It’s
better
to
leave
it
empty
rather
than
linking
to
stale
or
not-
touched-in-decade
websites
or
GitHub
profile
links.
Link
only
if
they
are
up
to
date.
So
many
guidelines,
and
you
can
still
commit
a
mistake
or
two,
no
matter
what.
To
recap,
consider
doing
most
of
these
to
make
your
resume
better:
Write
two
different
resumes,
then
create
a
third
one
from
the
best
parts
of
these
two.
Try
to
estimate
the
impacts
of
your
project.
A
rough
estimation
is
better
than
no
specific.
Do
grammar
check,
not
just
spell-check.
Ask
friends
or
family
to
proofread.
Seek
out
feedback
on
various
community .
Do
a
keyword
check
for
your
resume.
Manually
or
with
the
help
of
automated
tools.
Different
Levels,
Different
Paths
Depending
on
how
much
experience
you
carry,
you
will
want
to
focus
on
different
areas
of
resumes:
Resume
for
Students
If
you’re
still
a
student,
knowing
fundamentals
is
an
essence.
While
learning
software
development,
you
would
want
to
focus
on
these
things
for
a
future
job
search:
Internships
One
of
the
best
experiences
you
can
have
as
a
student
is
working
as
an
Intern.
Apply
in
natural
problem-solving
industries.
Campus
Activities
Your
university/college
might
offer
plenty
of
opportunities
to
work
with
a
professor,
lead
a
laboratory,
arrange
events,
etc.
Make
the
best
of
these
Times.
You
will
get
hands-on
experience
mentoring/leading
others
or
taking
the
initiative.University
Projects
You
will
undoubtedly
have
class
projects
or,
to
the
least,
the
final
year
Project.
Consider
putting
extra
time
and
effort
into
these
projects.
Publish
them
so
that
anyone
can
download
or
try
them.
Using
GitHub
will
be
super
beneficial.
If
possible,
buy
your
domain.
This
might
cost
you
bucks,
but
it’ll
be
worth
it
to
show
the
interviewer
what
you
have.
Clearly,
it
will
show
you
as
someone
who
knows
deployment
to
the
least.
Resume
for
Bootcamp
Grads
As
a
Bootcamp
grad
who
has
likely
learned
basic
software
development
skills,
your
time
spent
studying
these
will
be
shorter
than
college/university
students.
It
would
be
best
to
compete
with
these
graduate
people
and
other
Bootcamp
grads.
But
no
worries
if
you
have
the
capstone
project
on
your
resume.
So
what
do
you
need
to
focus
on?
Projects
It’s
universal
for
everyone
looking
for
a
job.
Develop
as
many
projects
as
you
want,
but
have
that
one
great
project!
To
stand
out,
you
will
want
to
showcase
better
projects.
Follow
these
tips:
́
Good
READMEs
Aim
to
write
a
README
with
a
good
summary:
screenshots,
details
on
how
to
run
&
test.
Contribute
to
other
open-source
projects
Find
projects
where
you
can
contribute.
Take
part
in
the
open-source
programs
I
mentioned
earlier.
If
you
can
merge
a
pull
request,
you
can
claim
that
you
have
contributed
to
a
project
used
by
more
than
a
certain
number
of
developers.
Turn
interview
projects/challenges
or
learnings
into
public
projects
You
can
do
more
than
submit
projects
or
do
coding
challenges
for
a
job
interview.
Without
caring
about
the
results,
continue
working
on
these
projects/challenges
and
submit
even
better-polished
solutions
online
on
GitHub.
If
you
cannot
reach
the
next
round,
ask
for
feedback,
and
build
that
feedback
into
this
project.
If
you
do
even
better,
don’t
hesitate
to
send
a
cold
email
with
these
latest
changes.
You
might
get
another
chance
to
do
it
better.
No
one
knows
unless
you
try.
Freelance
projects
Try
freelancing
once
in
life
while
you’re
in
search
of
a
job.
A
freelance
project
on
the
resume
can
tell
a
lot.
Landing
a
good
client
at
first
can
be
challenging.
If
your
goal
is
to
get
experience,
keep
the
focus
on
finding
projects
that
can
add
value
to
your
portfolio.
Publish
screenshots
and
code
snippets
of
the
work
on
the
portfolio
page
afterward.
You
don’t
need
to
disclose
how
much
you
got
paid.
The
goal
is
to
show
your
knowledge.
Resume
for
Career
Changers
Summary
Have
a
summary
section
that
explains
your
motivation/reason
for
a
career
change.
When
you
have
changed
careers
from
other
professions
to
software
development,
most
of
the
advice
is
the
same
as
for
a
Bootcamp
grad
you
might
have
some
training
behind
you.
Here
is
advice
for
you:
Languages
&
ProjectsList
towards
the
top
of
the
resume,
showing
that
you
have
hands-on
software
development
experience.
Follow
the
guidelines
for
listing
a
project,
i.e.,
source
code
link,
good
READMEs,
demo
link,
etc.
Past
work
experience
Keep
it
concise
and
have
a
one-sentence
summary
of
the
job.
Focus
on
any
points
or
skills
transferable
to
software
development,
e.g.,
proactive
learner,
team
leader,
etc.
One-page
resume
Try
to
fit
on
one
page.
Don’t
over-share
past
experiences
if
they
aren’t
beneficial
in
the
software
field.
Resume
for
Career
Breaks
You
might
have
gone
for
many
months—or
years—without
a
job
or
work
in
a
software
field.
It
might
be
why
you
were
pursuing
something,
or
you
wanted
to
take
a
break.
Either
way,
there’s
a
gap
in
your
resume.
How
do
you
present
this?
Career
break
years
You
don’t
need
to
explain
the
breaks
that
have
happened
more
than
a
few
years
ago
—
4
or
5
years.
Recruiters
or
hiring
managers
will
rarely
care
about
it.
For
recent
career
breaks,
use
your
good
judgment
on
whether
you
want
to
add
it.
Tell
a
story
of
your
career
break.
e.g..,
Due
to
COVID-19,
I
decided
to
take
a
break
to
spend
more
time
with
my
family.
How
to
address
a
career
break
on
your
CV
A
career
break
is
generally
defined
as
any
time
you’ve
been
off
work
for
an
extended
period
(of
typically
more
than
three
months)
that
has
been
for
any
reason
other
than
redundancy.
It
can
cover
illness,
travel,
a
sabbatical
,
having
children,
caring
for
relatives
and
many
other
reasons.
As
a
general
rule,
you
should
usually
explain
gaps
in
your
employment
history
and
be
honest
about
why
you
were
out
of
work
as
employers
may
uncover
any
exaggerations
if
they
call
previous
employers
for
reference.
The
real
trick
is
how
you
position
the
career
break.
By
putting
a
positive
spin
on
the
time
off,
many
employers
will
be
impressed
and
more
than
willing
to
accept
it.
More
than
anything,
they
want
reassurances
that
you
won’t
be
leaving
the
workforce
again
soon
and
that
you’re
motivated
to
get
back
into
employment.
Where
to
address
the
career
break
on
your
CVW hile
it’s
always
important
to
address
your
career
break,
you
don’t
need
to
go
into
great
detail
about
the
time
off.
In
most
cases,
it
can
be
summarised
in
a
short
sentence.
But
where
should
it
be
mentioned?
This
will
depend
on
how
recent
the
career
break
was,
and
possibly
your
motives
for
taking
it.
●
If
you
are
on
your
career
break
right
now:
Say
you’ve
been
out
of
work
caring
for
a
relative
for
the
last
six
months,
you’ll
want
to
explain
this
period
out
of
work
in
your
experience
section
as
well
as
in
your
personal
statement
●
If
your
career
break
occurred
in
the
last
one
to
five
years
but
you’re
employed
now:
you
needn’t
mention
it
in
your
personal
statement,
only
in
your
experience
section
●
If
it
was
a
long
time
ago:
Did
you
take
six
months
to
go
backpacking
around
India
in
1995?
Chances
are,
you
probably
needn’t
mention
the
career
break
at
all
How
to
describe
the
career
break
As
noted
above,
you
needn’t
go
into
great
detail
describing
the
career
break
–
no
more
than
a
line
or
two.
The
key
thing
here
is
to
emphasise
the
positives
and,
if
appropriate,
describe
any
new
skills
learnt
or
courses
taken.
It’ll
also
be
important
to
provide
some
reassurance
that
you’re
not
planning
another
career
break
any
time
soon.
Again,
let’s
look
at
some
examples:
●
You
went
travelling:
“I
fulfilled
my
life-long
dream
of
travelling
through
South
America
for
six
months
where
I
improved
my
Spanish
and
gained
an
understanding
of
different
cultures”
●
You
wanted
a
fresh
start:
“I
chose
to
take
time
off
work
to
pursue
my
interest
in
painting
and
had
the
time
to
decide
on
a
new
career
path
that
really
fits
my
personal
goals”●
You
were
ill:
“I
took
time
off
work
due
to
a
lengthy
illness,
but
the
time
off
allowed
me
to
fully
regain
fitness
for
the
long-term
and
I
became
involved
in
volunteering
at
a
local
charity
shop
to
get
me
back
into
the
swing
of
work”
●
You
were
caring
for
someone
else:
“I
took
time
off
to
care
for
my
brother
who
has
now
made
a
full
recovery”
Formatting
can
help
Addressing
a
career
break
is
all
about
accentuating
the
positives.
W hile
you
do
have
to
mention
you’ve
been
off
work,
you
can
format
your
CV
in
such
a
way
that
recruiters
focus
on
other
parts
of
your
employment
and
personal
history.
One
option
is
to
describe
jobs
in
terms
of
the
years
you
worked
there,
rather
than
exact
months.
For
example:
“Marketing
Company:
2009-2010”,
rather
than
“Marketing
Company:
November
2009-February
2010”:
●
Perhaps
during
your
early
career,
you
had
a
few
periods
out
of
work
for
personal
reasons,
but
since
then
have
followed
a
standard
career
path.
You
may
just
want
to
describe
those
early
years
in
this
way.
If
you’ve
had
a
more
stable
career
ever
since,
it’s
probably
not
necessary
to
draw
too
much
attention
to
that
earlier
spotty
period.
Alternatively,
you
might
want
to
create
a
‘skills’
or
‘themed’
CV
–
as
opposed
to
the
more
common
chronological
format:
●
Maybe
for
the
last
ten
years
or
so
you
had
the
opportunity
to
live
in
the
south
of
France
and
didn’t
need
to
work
much
but
are
now
keen
to
return
to
the
UK
and
restart
your
career.
Creating
a
skills-based
CV
could
be
really
helpful
here.
Take
the
time
to
think
how
the
skills
you’ve
learnt
while
out
of
work
could
be
reapplied.
For
instance,
you’d
likely
be
fluent
in
French
by
now
and
capable
of
working
in
a
multilingual
environment.
Or
you
might
be
familiar
with
French
tax
law
or
the
country’s
property
market,
knowledge
that
wouldbe
very
helpful
for
all
sorts
of
businesses.
By
making
your
skills
stand
out,
employers
will
understand
the
value
you
could
bring
them
and
look
past
the
time
out
of
formal
employment.
Example
Summary
Section
for
Career
Break:
I
am
a
confident
and
capable
office
manager
with
over
ten
years’
experience
in
a
range
of
businesses.
I
have
a
solid
understanding
of
all
core
office
management
responsibilities,
I
am
friendly
and
approachable,
and
I
learn
new
skills
fast.
I
am
now
returning
to
the
workforce
after
a
period
of
absence
while
providing
care
for
a
relative,
but
am
now
ready
and
motivated
to
restart
my
career.
For
the
past
two
months
I
have
taken
on
volunteering
work
as
a
part
time
office
manager
at
a
local
charity
to
refresh
my
skills.
Resume
for
Senior
or
above
Engineers
The
more
experienced
you
are,
the
more
likely
you
stand
out
based
on
your
experience
and
past
titles.
For
someone
having
experience
of
over
7-8
years,
your
challenge
will
be
to
keep
your
resume
relevant
to
the
position
you’re
applying
for:
Career
break
years
the
experience
you
carry,
the
hiring
team
will
look
forward
to
this
summary
section
to
know
about
your
motivation
behind
applying
to
their
firm.
Soft
Achievements
Mention
soft
achievements
—
mentoring
junior
developers,
leading
a
team,
and
other
activities
where
you
helped
others.
Impact
&
Influence
On
top
of
company
work,
you
can
mention
what
kind
of
impression
you
made
with
your
work.
Mention
what
teams
or
organizations
you
influenced
for
specific
outcomes.
Education
As
you
continue
gaining
more
experience,
education
will
have
less
value.
You
can
move
the
education
section
to
the
second
page.
Only
keep
standout
details
in
one
line
or
two.
Resume
for
Tech
Leads
You
might
have
gone
for
many
months—or
years—without
a
job
or
work
in
a
software
field.
It
might
be
why
you
were
pursuing
something,
or
you
wanted
to
take
a
break.
Either
way,
there’s
a
gap
in
your
resume.
How
do
you
present
this?Follow
these
guidelines
when
applying
for
the
tech
lead
position:
Showcase
how
you
helped
teams.
Hiring
managers
hire
tech
leads
when
they
feel
their
team
is
behind
on
delivery,
struggling
with
high
turnover,
or
delivering
poor
quality.
As
a
candidate,
you
will
want
to
showcase
these
points
where
you
helped
your
team
to
excel,
increased
speed,
improved
code
quality,
or
repaired
stakeholder
relationships.
Give
examples
of
how
you
made
your
team
successful.Y ou
will
be
expected
to
have
a
track
record.
Make
it
easier
to
find.
Specifics
and
Context
Specify
the
size
&
makeup
of
the
team—3
frontend,
2
backend
&
1
QA
engineer’s
team.
Mention
your
major
technical
choices
taken
within
the
team.
Outcomes
and
Activities
Please
talk
about
the
daily
scrums
and
how
you
managed
to
make
them
happen
within
the
deadlines.
Include
proof
points
for
delivery;
e.g.,
managed
a
team
of
x
developers
that
delivered
Project
X
on
time
and
within
budget.
Resume
for
Engineering
Managers
Most
percentages
of
the
guidelines
shared
for
tech
lead
positions
apply
to
the
role
of
engineering
managers.
But
you
would
like
to
provide
more
details:
Tell
a
story
about
how
you
achieved
results,
improved
your
team’s
performance,
&
how
made
your
organization
better.g
Be
familiar
with
the
values
of
the
company
you’re
applying
for.
Do
your
research
on
the
organization’ s
culture.g
Talk
about
the
type
of
challenges
you
are
fit
to
solve.
Point
out
what
kind
of
problems
made
you
achieve
your
best
results=
Get
feedback
from
your
peers
or
friends.
LinkedIn
Along
with
your
resume,
you
will
want
to
get
ready
other
things:
LinkedIn,
GitHub
Profile,
or
cover
letter.
Let’s
talk
about
how
to
create
a
better
LinkedIn
profile:
Resumes
and
LinkedIn
profiles
are
like
the
yin
and
yang.
You
directly
apply
with
a
resume,
and
opportunities
can
come
and
find
you
with
your
LinkedIn
profile.
It’s
smart
to
invest
equally
in
both.
Headline
Set
a
headline
that
represents
what
you
want
to
be
found
for.
It
should
summarize
the
message
you
would
want
to
convey.
If
you
set
nothing
on
your
profile,
your
current
position
will
appear.
Consider
adding
the
“|”
separator
character
to
add
more
information
to
your
headline.
For
example,
“Frontend
developer
with
2
years
of
experience
|
JavaScript,
Express,
MongoDB,
Next.js”.
A
tailored
headline
will
rank
your
profile
higher
with
keyword
searches
that
grab
the
recruiters’
attention.Current
Position
Describe
your
current
role
properly.
For
example,
if
you're
leading
a
team
of
frontend
developers,
you
should
write
“Frontend
Lead”
or
“Frontend
Team
Lead”.
Anything
that
best
describes
your
role.
If
you
don’t
have
a
current
job,
LinkedIn
will
rank
your
profile
lower.
Make
sure
not
to
leave
your
headline
empty,
even
if
you
don’t
have
a
position.
You
can
highlight
the
skills
you
know
in
that
case.
Summary
Mention
keywords,
technologies,
or
languages
you’re
familiar
with.
Go
for
a
longer
summary
that
best
describes
your
values
or
motivation
in
the
field.
You
don’t
have
to
fit
everything
on
a
page
on
LinkedIn.
In
fact,
with
more
content,
you
could
rank
higher
in
search
results.
So
it’s
fine
to
be
verbose
here.
Professional
photo
A
professional
photo
is
one
where
your
face
can
be
seen
properly
without
no
one
else
in
the
picture.
Work
Experience
Omit
work
experience
that
doesn’t
support
your
professional
career.
Your
profile
should
tell
a
good
story
of
your
professional
side.
Remove
positions
that
don’t
strengthen
this
image.
Open
for
work
Do
not
add
“Looking
for
opportunities”,
“open
for
a
new
role”
or
something
similar
on
your
headline.
It
doesn’t
add
much
value.
Instead,
it
will
take
the
space
that
you
might
have
used
to
present
yourself
or
highlight
your
skills.
You
can
activate
the
option
given
by
LinkedIn
to
let
recruiters
see
whether
you’re
open
for
work
or
not.
Networking
Connect
with
more
people.
React
out
to
the
great
minds!
The
close
you
are
connection-wise
with
the
recruiter,
the
higher
your
profile
will
rank.
Location
Location
is
often
a
filter
that
recruiters
use.
If
you’re
moving
to
a
different
location,
you
can
update
it.
In
case
you’re
looking
for
remote
positions,
you
can
specify
that. |