The Art of the Bullet Point: How to Write Concise, Powerful Statements
Toss out the old way of writing your resume. Learn to start every point with the big win you achieved (like money saved or earned) to instantly impress bosses.
Toss out the old way of writing your resume. Learn to start every point with the big win you achieved (like money saved or earned) to instantly impress bosses.
Don't use boring words like 'team player' in your resume opening. Learn the easy way to turn your summary into a strong business pitch that proves your value right away.
Don't just talk about 'Lessons Learned.' Use the Clinical Pivot to show how you fixed problems in past failures, making your resume stronger and proving you protect the company from future risks.
Change how you list your promotions. Use the 'Unified Growth Stack' to show recruiters your fast career success at one company, making you a more attractive executive candidate.
Stuck between what the computer likes on your resume and what the background check needs? Use the 'Market Title (Old Title)' trick to get noticed and still be honest.
Stop listing what you did. Start showing how well you did it! Learn the secret to making your resume prove you are a valuable hire, not just someone who did tasks.
Empty words on your resume don't work. Find out how to quickly change your resume from just listing labels to showing real achievements that matter.
The best job seekers don't just list what they did; they show exactly how they fixed the company's most costly problems using real numbers.
Hiding your great work in a 'Volunteer' section hurts your career. Learn Functional Integration to show the value you actually created, not just where you were paid.
Manage your multi-job career without burning out. Learn the secret to switching between your different roles easily and keeping your mind sharp for each one.
Don't hide your career break. Use a simple method to show that the time you took off was a smart plan to make you more valuable for your next big role.
The common wisdom says that if a resume bullet point doesn’t have a number, it doesn’t count. This pressure turns resume writing into a desperate hunt for digits rather than a reflection of your actual talent.
Your resume shouldn't be a list of chores. Learn the crucial shift from reporting on your tasks to documenting measurable results, using the Problem-Action-Result formula to prove your unique value to recruiters.