Practical. Honest. Free to read.
Most applicant tracking systems score your resume on three things: keyword match, format cleanliness, and work history. Here's how each one works, in plain English.
A practical guide to where certifications go, when to include expired ones, and how to handle the awkward 'in progress' status.
The question is a feature, not a bug. The interviewer wants to know how you frame your own story. Here's the 90-second structure that works.
Most applicant tracking systems score your resume on three things: keyword match, format cleanliness, and work history. Here's how each one works, in plain English.
The keyword-stuffing era is over. Modern ATS systems look for context, not just word count. Here's the practical keyword strategy that still works in 2026.
Forget the infographics and the two-column layouts. There's a short list of formatting rules that ATS systems actually care about. Most others don't matter.
A practical guide to where certifications go, when to include expired ones, and how to handle the awkward 'in progress' status.
The mistake most people make is listing duties. Hiring managers want to see results. Here's the difference, and how to make the switch.
Five real summary examples that landed interviews, with notes on why each one worked. Plus the three-line template you can adapt today.
The question is a feature, not a bug. The interviewer wants to know how you frame your own story. Here's the 90-second structure that works.
Yes, you can dodge the question. Yes, you can name a range higher than you expect. Here's what to say and when to say it.
Two short paragraphs, sent within 24 hours. The template is below. Customize it for the role.
Not a template gallery. A real resume, annotated section by section, with notes on what hiring managers looked at and why.
Hospital HR systems are notoriously picky. Here's a layout that consistently passes the ATS and reads well to a human hiring manager.
Switching industries is the hardest resume to write. Here's one that worked, with notes on what to keep, what to drop, and what to emphasize.
Eye-tracking studies and recruiter interviews both point to the same thing: a small handful of things get the most attention, and they're not what most candidates think.
75% of resumes are rejected before a human sees them. How long do recruiters spend on a first scan? What's the real impact of a single typo?
Two-column layouts, infographics, and video resumes all had their moment. What survived? A look at what's actually working in 2026.