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How to Write a Resume That Stands Out

  • Paige Cohen

It takes hiring managers less than 10 seconds to decide if you’re qualified.

harvard school of business resume template

  • PC Paige Cohen (they/them) is a senior editor at Harvard Business Review.

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How to Make Your Resume Stand Out

Job Seeker with Resume

  • 08 Aug 2019

At 3.7 percent, the US unemployment rate is lower than it’s been in 50 years, giving those looking for work an advantage. But competition is always fierce for the most coveted roles at the hottest organizations. Before you submit your application, here are eight tips to help ensure your resume will get noticed.

1. Your Online Profile May Matter Most

If you play your cards right, recruiters will come to you. To make that happen, almost more important than a resume is a solid LinkedIn or online profile. Be sure your profile (and resume) tell a story about what you’ve done in your career, why you’ve done it, and the results you achieved. Use clear and simple language, and carefully sprinkle in keywords that are important for the role you desire and field you’re pursuing.

2. Use Keywords and Optimize Your Profile for Search

We live in a Google-centric world, and machines do a lot of the heavy lifting when it comes to screening applicants. According to CNBC , 75 percent of resumes are never reviewed by a human. To guarantee that yours is part of the other 25 percent, you should ensure that:

  • Recruiters who are sourcing candidates on job boards find you
  • Your resume makes it through the machine filtering software the majority of companies use to track applicants

Optimize your LinkedIn and online profiles for job sites like Indeed and Glassdoor, and bolster your resume using keywords commonly used in your field. Buzzwords, specific applications you use, and certifications you’ve earned can all help you rise to the top.

3. Show Your Creativity

You absolutely need to have a text-only version of your resume for uploading to company sites, but since most jobs come through networking , your actual resume and profile should show off your personality. Be sure that the PDF version you send to a personal contact within a company or bring to an interview is visually appealing.

Make yours stand out by using a modern (but not too funky) font, layout, color palette, and punchy copy. A unique twist or fresh look and feel on your resume could be what catches the hiring manager’s eye.

4. Action Speaks Louder than Words

Strong job candidates show, rather than just tell. Delivering a clear story about what you did in your previous roles is a start, but it’s more important to share the results of your actions and prove the impact you had on a project or at a company. Whenever possible, demonstrate your success with numbers that show efficiency, money saved or secured for a business, or goals exceeded.

For some jobs—like software developer, content developer, or social media expert—showing your proficiency may be critical to capturing a recruiter’s attention. You can tease your results on your resume, but actually directing readers to your personal website, social media channels, or developer proficiency site, like GitHub, can really bring your capabilities to life.

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5. Tailor for the Job

It’s great to have a summary at the top of your resume that captures what you’re seeking in your next role, along with your core competencies and achievements. Equally important is tailoring your profile for each job. If you’re in the communications field, for example, you might play up your PR experience when it’s specifically called out in the position’s requirements. But if the title is Social Media Manager, Content Creator, or Internal Communications Specialist, the emphasis needs to be on the skills for those particular roles.

Related: How to Land Your Dream Job in 9 Steps

6. Less is More

In today’s tight talent market, HR professionals are short on time. A survey by Ladders says that most recruiters spend less than six seconds reviewing a resume. For that reason, keep your resume short. Limit it to one page if you have less than 10 years of professional work experience, and use succinct bullet points to make it easy to skim.

7. No Typos Allowed

Typos or grammatical errors on your resume can land it in the trash. A sloppy resume can potentially signal that you’re not serious about the role, or simply not buttoned-up and professional. When you’ve stared at your document a million times, however, it can be hard to spot errors. That’s why you should always have someone else proofread your work. Fresh eyes can zero in on mistakes more easily, so ask your most detail-oriented friend to be your editor.

8. Focus on Qualities and Skills

For many jobs, distinguishing qualities like teamwork, attention to detail, and ability to juggle multiple priorities are often considered more important than where you went to school or your GPA. Highlighting those competencies and how you learned and demonstrated them through summer jobs, community service, extracurricular activities , or even group projects at school matters. It doesn’t necessarily require years of professional experience to develop the skills required for certain roles.

Related: Tips for Transitioning from College to Your Career

Achieving Job Search Success

When you’re looking for work, keep in mind that there are many qualified candidates vying for the same job. Like a competitive sport, you need to bring you’re “A game” to your resume and make sure you’re primed for success.

Are you interested in advancing your career? Explore our catalog of online courses , and learn how you can gain the confidence and skills to succeed in business. And be sure to check out our other career development content , such as “ 6 Tips to Prepare for Your Next Salary Negotiation ” and “ How to Properly Follow Up After a Job Interview .”

harvard school of business resume template

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I n 2017, Sarah Bond’s boss, Phil Spencer, the head of Xbox Gaming, warned her that working in the industry would be very difficult.

Not just for the usual reasons that corporate America can be tough, but also because, as a Black woman in gaming—an industry with a reputation for its sometimes toxic culture, including misogyny, racism, and online harassment—she might not always feel welcome.

Sarah Bond (MBA 2006) turned to Spencer, her gaze direct, and said, “Phil, my aunt died yesterday. She was a colonel in the Army in the era of segregation. That was hard.”

He paused for a moment, she recalls, and then offered her the job.

In retrospect, Bond appreciates the warning, and she knows her longtime boss was just looking out for her. But as she speaks about the experience seven years later, in her bright office on the sprawling Microsoft campus in Redmond, Washington, walls covered in a rainbow of Xbox controllers, she wants to dig into Spencer’s warning. After all, she isn’t just working at Xbox—now she’s the company’s president. Yes, she faces inherent cultural challenges. She’s also facing business challenges, like how to increase market share and capture the changing video-game audience. Even so, she has no fear. “Let’s get real about hard,” she says. “Whenever I encounter something hard, I remind myself there is nothing that can be done to me that has not been done to my ancestors. I’ve only achieved what I’ve achieved because of all the people who came before.”

B ond, one of seven children, says that though she experienced her share of racism and misogyny as every Black woman has, she is grateful for all she experienced growing up.

She moved to London with her dad, Bruce Bond, who had taken a job as director of strategy with British Telecom, when she was 10. She attended British boarding schools before graduating from Yale as an economics major in 2001. After leaving the Ivy League, she accepted a position with consulting giant McKinsey in its San Francisco office, having turned down an offer from Goldman Sachs. Bond took a break from McKinsey in 2004 to get her MBA and then moved to the firm’s Seattle office in 2006, after relocating with her now-husband, Cory Toedebusch (MBA 2006) . From there, she became the chief of staff to the CEO of T-Mobile in 2011 and senior vice president of emerging business by 2017, a period that saw the carrier grow from an underdog to one of the big-three American cell carriers.

All of this experience prepared Bond to take on the role she accepted last October: president of Xbox. It was a historic moment for the diversity of the gaming industry and one with great personal significance for Bond, who has spent years navigating boy’s clubs and being the only person of color in the room. “So I appreciated the warnings about the industry but that’s been my whole life,” she says.

While Bond, who is 45 years old, saw being a business executive like her father as a potential career path growing up, she remembers feeling a particular attraction, as she was applying to business school, to the idea of becoming a specific type of leader. “I became convinced that I would be a turnaround CEO. I got very specific that what I wanted to do was take something that seemed impossible and make it possible,” she says.

Xbox recently surpassed Windows to become the third-largest revenue earner of the company, according to reporting by technology website The Verge. While it may not seem to fit the bill of a company in need of turning around, Bond says there’s a lot of work to be done.

“The industry is on a steep upward trajectory, The threat is to any company in the industry: If someone else is improving at a faster rate than me, even if I’m better than them today, I won’t be better than them tomorrow.”

The company acquired gaming studio Activision Blizzard in late 2023, over the objections of regulators who had tried to block it. That’s thanks in part to Bond’s lead-witness testimony on Microsoft’s behalf. Since closing the deal, the company has implemented multiple rounds of layoffs and closed some smaller game studios. Then there’s slowing growth in both console sales and Xbox Game Pass, the company’s video-game streaming service, especially since the pandemic, when the video gaming business was booming.

And beyond the business metrics, there’s the challenge of trying to make the gaming industry more accepting and diverse. The specter of Gamergate, an online harassment campaign that began in 2014 and threatened diverse game creators, mostly women, still hangs over the industry. Toxic workplace cultures have been called out at game studios all over the world. Meanwhile, video games are more popular than ever, and players today are far more diverse than the game-makers.

The gaming industry is currently in a kind of arms race to change that homogeneity within the companies, to better match the customer base, says HBS professor Frances Frei . That’s partly out of financial necessity. More diverse teams tend to produce products that appeal to more diverse audiences. “The industry is on a steep upward trajectory,” Frei says. “The threat is to any company in the industry: If someone else is improving at a faster rate than me, even if I’m better than them today, I won’t be better than them tomorrow.” But as Frei knows firsthand—she has worked with Uber and Riot Games to help diversify company culture—fixing it will take courage. “I can tell you who’s going to win. That’s going to be the ones that resist their insular tendencies, like male gamers creating for male gamers, because that’s not the customer anymore.”

Bond is looking at these big issues with the same steely-eyed gaze she leveled at Spencer when he told her the job wouldn’t be a walk in the park. “Who else is going to do it?” she says she asked herself. “I can do it. I’m smart enough to do it. Driven enough to do it. I love Xbox. I have a support network. Why would I leave this for somebody else?” Ultimately, Bond decided that the gaming industry was the perfect place for her turnaround-executive mindset: “At one of the world’s largest gaming platforms, I can actually make real change.”

harvard school of business resume template

S arah Bond has never had trouble saying the thing out loud that everyone else is thinking.

In 2001, while a senior at Yale, she was flown out to McKinsey’s San Francisco office for the final rounds of a job interview. About 20 other candidates were there, she says, and they all seemed petrified. The day was long, with case interviews, a group exercise, a multiple-choice test, and a personality assessment. During the test, Bond remembers the room was silent, filled only with the stressed scribblings of the other candidates at their individual desks. Bond looked up and asked out loud: “Does anybody else think it’s strange that they’re basically giving us an SAT test?”

No one responded.

harvard school of business resume template

Bond prepares to record the Super Gaming Update, a quarterly meeting for global gaming employees, at the Xbox studio in April.

harvard school of business resume template

Later, Bond was one of two people in the group who was offered a job. Today, she is still stating uncomfortable truths out loud. But now, Bond is often the one running the meetings and trying to get others to say what’s on their minds. One of the roles she sees for herself as a leader is to allow others to feel they’re able to say the hard things, too.

Bond’s husband, Toedebusch, who met her during their first year at HBS, says her way of listening and problem-solving has always stood out. “She’s super empathetic and can understand what people are saying but really homes in on what they’re feeling or thinking—the unsaid. What are their motivations? What are they worried about? What are they trying to accomplish? She’s always been very good at that.”

Anyone who works with Bond notices this communication style. Before Xbox vice president of business development Lori Wright met Bond in person, she was intimidated by her résumé. “All I knew was based on her LinkedIn profile, and I thought, ‘Wow, what an accomplished human being, ’ ” she says. But when Wright walked into the room, she and Bond instantly connected on a personal level. Wright loved the blouse Bond was wearing, and they ended up talking about how Bond found it at a market in Southeast Asia. “We went and grabbed lunch together. And we talked about our backgrounds and how we grew up and our family histories.” Bond’s authenticity made Wright feel comfortable sharing things about herself and her motivations.

Bond oversees teams focused on hardware and software, business development, business operations, marketing, and strategy. Getting those various individuals, each with their own expertise, to speak to each other comfortably is a necessity. “The inherent training and the day-to-day lives of people inside of each of those verticals are very distinct, so unless you force the conversation across them, you won’t get as good a result,” she says.

But that doesn’t mean endless meetings just to have meetings, a challenge at a company that has occasionally weighed itself down with bureaucracy. Bond wants problems solved, issues aired, and conversations happening that matter in the moment.

harvard school of business resume template

After Xbox completed its acquisition of Activision Blizzard in 2023, Microsoft Gaming CEO Phil Spencer (center) announced a new leadership structure, with Matt Booty (left) the president of game content and studios and Bond (right) the president of Xbox.

One of the biggest business problems she wants to address is the fact that the Xbox console has been number three in console sales for years. “The last console we built was, by many measures, the best console of that generation,” she says. “But that didn’t change our market position.” Bond wants her team to realize greater success and says that starts by helping them all imagine a different way forward. “I get to help people see that whatever paradigm they think they’re living in isn’t true—that you can bend solid steel.”

Answers to these tough questions, like how to shift a market position, can’t come from on high, she says. They come from teamwork. “And what I mean by teamwork is actually integrated diversity of thought across many domains.” An engineer may see one answer, a business executive another, a marketer or lawyer still others, she explains. “But if you can hold all those disciplines equal in your mind and create a space where everyone from all those disciplines can come together, and all things have equal value, you can unlock things. When people think something’s impossible, it’s because they’re looking from one angle, and they just need to turn it.”

“When people think something’s impossible, it’s because they’re looking from one angle, and they just need to turn it.”

Her direct communication style has worked for all kinds of problems faced in business, from a technical issue to an interpersonal one. When she joined Microsoft in 2017, Bond noticed a colleague had a pattern. “Whenever I would say something in meetings, they would say that it didn’t make sense, or it wasn’t a good idea. But when other people said something in meetings, they said they thought it was a good idea.”

Bond didn’t gripe or become disheartened. Instead, she booked a one-on-one on the colleague’s calendar and talked it out. “I said, ‘Hey, I noticed that whenever I say something in a meeting, you say one of these three phrases, but when other people say things, you say positive phrases. I feel like the rate of my good ideas to bad ideas is probably the same as those people’s. So I’m just sort of curious, why you do that?”

harvard school of business resume template

“I became convinced that I would be a turnaround CEO. I got very specific that what I wanted to do was take something that seemed impossible and make it possible,” Bond says.

harvard school of business resume template

The colleague was taken aback, and Bond told them she was only saying something because she felt safe enough to bring it up. And her hope was that speaking with openness from her own perspective and, “loving kindness in my heart,” created more inclusivity, rather than drama. Once a person is aware of the tendency, Bond says, they can adjust for it, which will allow more people to have space at the table. Wright has seen this play out regularly. “She surprises me almost every day in that way,” she says. “When something is said or done that does not feel respectful or culturally inclusive, she’ll be the first one that will pause the conversation and call it out.”

She also sees her communication style, even when uncomfortable, as a way to treat employees with humanity. When Xbox experienced layoffs last year, Bond insisted those who had just lost their jobs also be included in the all-hands meeting the following day. “They were our colleagues yesterday and this event happened to them as well as to the other people,” she says.

Bond works closely alongside Matt Booty, the head of Xbox Game Studios, and Spencer, the CEO of Microsoft Gaming. As the sole woman and person of color in this trio, she sees part of her role as bringing her own perspective to them, and sometimes pointing out where their perspectives might be missing some information. Some have called this kind of communication “risky” behavior. Bond sees it as necessary, because she’s not just thinking about her own job when she does it. “If I think of the risk as about my loss or my reward, then sure it’s risky, but if the risk is for everyone who came before me and everyone who is coming after me, then the denominator is infinite and the math changes: It actually flips to an imperative.”

harvard school of business resume template

Gamers sample the product at the Gamescom trade fair in Cologne, Germany, in 2023. (Photo by Alex Kraus/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

W hen Bond was offered a job at T-Mobile as the chief of staff to then-CEO Philipp Humm in 2011, she was four months pregnant with her first child.

But she took the opportunity because it felt like the learning opportunity of a lifetime: “I was very cognizant that McKinsey had taught me how to solve a problem but in a very narrow way.” At the consultancy you were presented with one project at a time and laser-focused on how to solve it. But to sit next to the CEO? She’d be able to learn all the other parts of the company that one project might affect, and she’d learn how to be a manager.

One week after she started, T-Mobile announced it would be acquired by AT&T. The Department of Justice sued to block the deal. Nine months later, AT&T walked away. T-Mobile had no financial plan as an independent company. Bond stayed on. Humm resigned. Bond stayed on. John Legere arrived as CEO, and Bond stayed on. The work was all-encompassing as the company emerged into a new life. The once-struggling wireless company with spotty coverage and no iPhones launched the “un-carrier” marketing strategy, acquired discount wireless provider MetroPCS, and became publicly traded in the United States.

“The beauty of [video games] is that they have the ability to change your point of view or open your aperture without your ever knowing that’s what they were doing. You’re just having fun.”

Bond credits working through that turmoil at T-Mobile with teaching her that executives aren’t gods; they’re just people. “It was very demystifying for me,” she says. “There was nothing to say that I couldn’t one day be one of those people.” But every morning she had to say goodbye to her daughter; she hadn’t been at the company long enough to qualify for maternity leave. “When [my daughter] started to become aware that I left for work every day, that was super hard. Here’s this amazing, precious person, with her little pink pants. And she’s saying, ‘No, don’t go.’ And I remember really struggling with that.”

At first, like many working parents, Bond told herself she had to go to work so she could pay for the things her daughter needed. “And then I thought, no, that isn’t right, this isn’t a subsistence issue. I’m going because when I go into work every day, I don’t see anyone else who looks like me. If I don’t go, who is there? What does that mean for her world?”

Today, Bond’s two children are both in school and the work she’s doing at Xbox is shaping their future worlds. In a recent survey of Gen Z teens, around 30 percent list video games as their preferred entertainment, ahead of social media, television, and movies. And the vast majority of Gen Z and Gen Alpha gamers cite the social aspect of gaming as the most appealing part. In other words, games are often how younger generations interact with their peers.

Bond says this is what has always drawn her to video games. She came to gaming as a young person because her dad loved gaming: “When I’d come home from boarding school on Fridays, he’d always be waiting for me with a Hawaiian pizza and a video-game controller.” Even today, she loves games that allow her to connect with others, open her mind, and embrace other people’s skill sets.

Now she’s sharing that same tradition with her own children, who both love that Bond works for Xbox and play games with her and Toedebusch, Bond says, “after they’ve done their homework and brushed their teeth and picked up their rooms and fed their lizard.” And the couple have continued the mission of looking at their careers as building a better world for their children. As their kids were preparing to go back to school after COVID lockdowns, they made a decision as a family that Toedebusch would leave his job as a marketing director at Amazon and spend time as a stay-at-home parent so Bond could focus more intently on her job. Though Toedebusch enjoyed his work, he said it made the most sense for him to take the career break. “When you look at the workforce dynamics and who was leaving the workforce after COVID, we agreed that the world—and our children—would benefit more from Sarah remaining versus another white male working in tech.”

And Bond has already seen the impact of how more inclusive video games can build more diverse friendships and connections. “In an environment where I see so much strife and division, I think that’s just powerful and very needed,” she says. “And the beauty of [video games] is that they have the ability to change your point of view or open your aperture without your ever knowing that’s what they were doing. You’re just having fun.” The sheer number of young people playing video games makes getting those games right all the more important, for the culture in general, but also for the success of the Xbox business. Players gravitate toward the platforms that have the games they like and that appeal to them. That’s part of the reason Bond is so proud of being a part of launching the Developer Acceleration Program in 2023, which offers grants to smaller game developers from underrepresented backgrounds to make games for Xbox. The company has also spent billions in recent years acquiring game studios like Activision Blizzard, but also smaller, more boutique studios, in an attempt to corner the next big thing in gaming.

HBS professor Frei agrees that the power of video gaming is immense. “It’s certainly less risky to go be the CEO of Goldman Sachs than it is to go be the CEO of a gaming company when you’re a Black woman, because of the recent history of [doxxing] etc. Having said that, gamers are freaking sensational, and Goldman Sachs can never make us as happy as the gaming company can.”

It’s a risk Bond is ready for.

Her godmother used to tell her that “becoming is greater than being,” but recently Bond started to question that. “Actually, the truth is, there is no being; there is only becoming. We are in a constant state of change. So the goal is to make sure that you’re going in the right direction.” As every gamer knows, the path isn’t always clear but figuring it out is the fun part.

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StrengthsProfile is an online self-assessment tool designed to unlock your individual strengths.  Discover your individual realized and unrealized strengths, and learn how to highlight these in your applications and interviews.

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Crimson Careers is the central platform that the Mignone Center for Career Success uses for appointments, workshops, employer events, career …

Firsthand Advisors

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MCS Firsthand Advisors  platform connects students with alumni virtually from a variety of Harvard schools who have worked at top …

Interstride

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Interstride is an interactive career platform designed to enhance the career exploration and job-search experience for international students. Although this …

Big Interview

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Big Interview has multiple tools students can use to prepare for interviewing. In addition to a thorough online curriculum and …

Candid Career

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Candid Career contains thousands of videos to help students and recent alumni learn about career pathways through short clips that …

StrengthsProfile

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Discover your individual realized and unrealized strengths. Learn how to highlight these in your applications and interviews.

StrengthsProfile is an …

MCS Guides & Publications

Harvard college resumes & cover letter guide.

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A resume is a concise, informative summary of your abilities, education, and experience.

Harvard College Resume Example (Tech)

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Use this template as reference to build out your computer science resume.

Harvard College Bullet Point Resume Template

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Word (.docx) version.

Download or make a copy to edit (do not request edit access): Google Docs version.

Use this …

Harvard College Resume Example (Engineering)

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Use this template as reference to build out your engineering resume.

Harvard College Paragraph Resume Template

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Harvard Griffin GSAS PhD Resume & Cover Letter Guide

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When applying to most non-research-oriented, non-academic jobs, you will want to use a resume instead of a CV.

Resume/CV/Cover Letter Templates

Recommended websites, hes self-assessment resources.

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There are a wide variety of resources out there to help you identify your values, interests, personality and skills and …

House Prelaw Tutors and Websites ; This content is restricted to certain users. Please login or sign up to see if you are eligible to view this content.

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Pre-Med and Pre-Health Volunteer Opportunities in the Greater Boston Area

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An MCS spreadsheet of volunteer opportunities in the Boston area that might be of interest to Premed/Pre-Health concentrators.

CARC Career Webinar Video Library

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Each semester, the Harvard Extension School Career and Academic Resource Center (CARC) holds a series of live Career Webinars open …

GSAS Career Exploration and Job Search Links

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Browse a curated list of Nonacademic and Academic job search links.

HES Career Services Overview

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An overview of the career services available to HES admitted degree candidates.

MCS Curated Lists

Mcs professional attire guide.

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Other Resources:

If you are having trouble accessing professional attire, check out the Crimson Career Closet . Any Harvard College student …

Technical Interviews

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When interviewing for technical roles like software engineer, data scientist, quantitative analyst, or product manager, expect both technical assessments and …

Leadership Development and Rotational Programs

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Below is a sample of the organizations that have structured leadership development programs. These entry-level programs often allow employees to …

MCS Recruiting

Fastmath ; this content is restricted to certain users. please login or sign up to see if you are eligible to view this content..

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Case Questions Exchange Platform ; This content is restricted to certain users. Please login or sign up to see if you are eligible to view this content.

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CaseQuestions.com Video Vault ; This content is restricted to certain users. Please login or sign up to see if you are eligible to view this content.

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Case Questions Interactive ; This content is restricted to certain users. Please login or sign up to see if you are eligible to view this content.

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Recruiting Eligibility

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Recruiting is for Harvard FAS students and recent alumni. The employers who participate often hire for “entry-level” roles and internships, …

Firsthand Vault Guides

Vault guide to defense jobs.

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The  Vault Guides to Jobs  series provides essential information about key careers and industries, with an emphasis on preparing for …

Vault Guide to Investment Banking Jobs

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Vault Guide to Investment Management

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Vault Guide to Hedge Fund Jobs

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Vault Guide to Mathematics and Physics Jobs

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Vault Guide to Automotive Manufacturing Jobs

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Videos & Recorded Webinars

How to mcs ; this content is restricted to certain users. please login or sign up to see if you are eligible to view this content., job market insights in partnership with.

Find a career that aligns with your career interests, see current salary projects, and identify skills you need to apply for that next job or internship.

There are two ways to use this tool below:

  • By Keyword:  Search for the name of the occupation you’re interested in.
  • By Industry:  Not sure what job you’d like? Search by desired industry and see available occupations.
  • Find career data by selecting keywords Keyword Search
  • or, by filtering for industry and occupation Industry Search

First, choose an industry of interest, then filter for occupation. (If you'd like to see data for a specific location only, filter by state.)

Type in a keyword to select a relevant occupation. (If you'd like to see data for a specific location only, filter by state.)

Occupation Description

Employment trends, top employers, education levels, annual earnings, technical skills, core competencies.

Explore all Job Market Insights.

Organizations

Harvard academic resource center (arc), hes career and academic resource center (carc), office for the arts, center for public service and engaged scholarship, harvard college office of undergraduate research and fellowships (uraf), harvard fas disability access office, contact & location.

Harvard University 54 Dunster Street Cambridge, MA 02138

M Monday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
T Tuesday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
W Wednesday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
TH Thursday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm
F Friday 9:00 am - 5:00 pm

Blogs | Employers | Events | Jobs  | Resources | Videos | Meet the Team | Maps & Directions

The Mignone Center for Career Success (MCS) is committed to ensuring access to a broad range of information and opportunities across all sectors. Our website contains external content that may be useful to our learners. The inclusion of external content does not necessarily constitute endorsement, recommendation, or agreement with the information.

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Yale, Cambridge Grad with Years of Application Writing Experience Ryan S.

275 hours tutoring, yale, cambridge grad with years of application writing experience yale, cambridge grad with years of application writing experience ryan s..

Featured Review: See all reviews Attentive and thorough career development tutor! Zoe, 5 lessons with Ryan Working with Ryan on my personal statement for medical school was game-changing. His genius, aptitude, and talent made all the difference for the most central document for my application. After only one brainstorming session he was able to help transform my story into an absolute masterpiece. He was attentive, diligent, and thorough to the most fundamental elements of my narrative. He took notes, asked questions, and probed me to excavate my most important storylines. Additionally, he... Working with Ryan on my personal statement for medical school was game-changing. His genius, aptitude, and talent made all the difference for the most central document for my application. After only one brainstorming session he was able to help transform my story into an absolute masterpiece. He was attentive, diligent, and thorough to the most fundamental elements of my narrative. He took notes, asked questions, and probed me to excavate my most important storylines. Additionally, he completed his own research to provide the statement with contextual information to better connect the hook to my academic interests. Overall, I am more than pleased with Ryan’s attention to detail and care. I would highly recommend him to family, friends, and classmates. Read more

As a Fulbright Scholar, a published author, a graduate of Emory University and Yale University (and recipient of the Dean's Prize for Outstanding Thesis), and as a current MPhil candidate enrolled at the University Cambridge, I have myself written countless application essays for university admissions and submitted dozens of applications for prestigious fellowships and scholarships.

I have a strong track record of writing and editing work. I most recently served as a Graduate Writing...

I have a strong track record of writing and editing work. I most recently served as a Graduate Writing Tutor at Yale's prestigious Poorvu Center for Teaching and Learning, and presently work for a highly sought after college admissions consulting firm that has a proven history of maximizing applicants' chances of gaining admission to their top-choice schools.

As a college admissions consultant/application editor, I have helped students gain admission to top-tier universities like Yale, Columbia, MIT, Princeton, and Brown, and have served as an admissions reader for my alma maters. I look forward to working with you to make your application essays/assignments the best they can be!

I will help you plan, strategize, and revise your college admission application/fellowship/scholarship essays!

I also offer help with: - Personal statements - Cover letters - Transfer application essays - Graduate School application essays - Scholarship/Fellowship application essays - Academic essays - Theses/research essays - Personal essays (creative nonfiction writing)

For college admissions counseling: If you decide to work with me, our first meeting will establish your goals and brainstorm topics to help us craft the main essay for the Common App (your personal statement). I will also disseminate two presentations I have developed—tips compiled after one-on-one meetings with hundreds of students—entitled "Tackling the Admissions Process" and "The Successful Scholarship Hunter” to you, presentations that have proven helpful to my former students in making the admissions process more manageable.

In subsequent meetings, we w

  • Hourly Rate: $150
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Approved Subjects

Career development, public speaking, corporate training, most popular, college counseling, test preparation, questions contact ryan before you book., still have questions, ratings and reviews.

Attentive and thorough career development tutor! Working with Ryan on my personal statement for medical school was game-changing. His genius, aptitude, and talent made all the difference for the most central document for my application. After only one brainstorming session he was able to help transform my story into an absolute masterpiece. He was attentive, diligent, and thorough to the most fundamental elements of my narrative. He took notes, asked questions, and probed me to excavate my most important storylines. Additionally, he completed his own research to provide the statement with contextual information to better connect the hook to my academic interests. Overall, I am more than pleased with Ryan’s attention to detail and care. I would highly recommend him to family, friends, and classmates. Zoe, 5 lessons with Ryan
College Essay Editing Ryan was incredible and made really good edits to my daughter's Common App Essay. We had tried several people, but his were by far the most useful and well crafted edits. Definitely worth the price, no comparison to anyone else! Kerri, 4 lessons with Ryan
Knowledgeable and Professional Tutor I always love my sessions with Ryan. Thus far, he has helped me with my research studies to scholarship essays. He is always thorough and reliable to help me meet my goals! Chanel, 6 lessons with Ryan
Exceptional! Ryan did an amazing job editing my essays. I recommend him with no reservations. Ryan is thorough, easy to work with, and accommodating to schedules. His editing is both substantive and stylistic, and he is able to show one's self-awareness without sounding either self-deprecating or arrogant—perfectly balanced, sensitive without pandering. The work I did with Ryan helped me take my essays to the next level, but more than that, I believe that working with him will also pay off in my ability to respond effectively in upcoming admissions interviews. He is highly professional and has a lot of knowledge about the college admissions process. I recommend him. J, 3 lessons with Ryan
Knowledgeable and enthusiastic We've only connected once so far, but I really enjoyed my time with Ryan. He is attentive, understanding but isn't afraid to highlight ways to improve an existing personal statement. I'm thankful for his expertise. Natalie, 3 lessons with Ryan
Great Teacher Mr. Ryan was extremely helpful and explained all the different ways I could improve my personal statement very clearly. I am very satisfied with this session. Trinh, 5 lessons with Ryan
Extremely knowledgeable and helpful Great tutor. In an hour he set me up perfectly for writing my personal statement. It was clear he knew exactly what he was talking about. Highly recommend hiring him for any help you need. Thomas, 2 lessons with Ryan
Really helpful! I was having difficulty coming up with ideas for my PA School supplemental essay and Ryan helped me a lot. After writing the essay, Ryan went over it with me and helped me clean up any grammatical errors and polish the wording as well. Overall really helpful and highly recommended if you are having trouble with applications because he definitely knows what he’s talking about. Lauren, 2 lessons with Ryan

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COMMENTS

  1. Harvard College Resumes & Cover Letter Guide

    Harvard College Bullet Point Resume Template; Harvard College Resume Example (Engineering) Harvard College Paragraph Resume Template; ... Harvard College Guide to Applying to Business School; Harvard College Guide to the Nonprofit Job Search; Financing a Medical Education; Premedical Information for Harvard Students: Timelines, Courses ...

  2. Resumes & Cover Letters

    Sample 1: C-Level Resume (login required) Sample 2: Consulting to Operating Company Resume (login required) Sample 3: VP with Long Tenure Resume (login required) ... Harvard Business School Teele Hall Soldiers Field Boston, MA 02163 Phone: 1.617.495.6890 Email: alumni+hbs.edu.

  3. How to Write a Résumé That Stands Out

    Save. Buy Copies. Summary. It can be hard to know how to make your resume stand out. Start by accepting that it's going to take some time and effort. Don't try to sit down and knock it out in ...

  4. How to Use the Harvard Resume Template (Guide and Examples)

    You should use the Harvard resume template when you're applying to highly formal jobs that put an emphasis on your achievements. For example, the Harvard resume template would be helpful if you're applying to any of the following roles: ... (Harvard Business School Case Study, 20XX) Authored in-depth case study on analytics models for ...

  5. How to Write a Resume That Stands Out

    Earn badges to share on LinkedIn and your resume. Access more than 40 courses trusted by Fortune 500 companies. ... Harvard Business Publishing is an affiliate of Harvard Business School. ...

  6. MAKE A COPY OF THE DOC

    Beginning with your most recent position, describe your experience, skills, and resulting outcomes in bullet or paragraph form. Begin each line with an action verb and include details that will help the reader understand your accomplishments, skills, knowledge, abilities, or achievements. Quantify where possible.

  7. Create a Resume/CV or Cover Letter

    Create a Resume/CV or Cover Letter. A resume is a brief, informative document summarizing your abilities, education, and experience. It should highlight your strongest assets and differentiate you from other candidates. Used most frequently in academic settings, a CV (curriculum vitae) is also a summary of your experience and abilities, but a ...

  8. PDF CVs and Cover Letters

    Harvard University • Harvard College and Graduate School of Arts and Sciences 54 Dunster Street • Cambridge, MA 02138 Telephone: (617) 495-2595 • www.ocs.fas.harvard.edu ... Unlike a resume, there is no page limit, but most graduate students' CVs are two to five pages in

  9. Resume / CV

    MBA Admissions Harvard Business School Spangler Welcome Center (Spangler 107) Boston, MA 02163 Phone: 1.617.495.6128 Email: [email protected]

  10. How to Write a Résumé That Stands Out

    It can be hard to know how to make your resume stand out. Start by accepting that it's going to take some time and effort. Don't try to sit down and knock it out in an hour - you're carefully crafting a marketing document. Open strong with a summary of your expertise. Use an accomplishments section after the opener to link your ...

  11. How to Make Your Resume Stand Out

    Make yours stand out by using a modern (but not too funky) font, layout, color palette, and punchy copy. A unique twist or fresh look and feel on your resume could be what catches the hiring manager's eye. 4. Action Speaks Louder than Words.

  12. How to Build a Resume That Stands Above the Competition

    Your template is your first impression. The reality is that a hiring manager only spends 6-10 seconds looking at your resume on their first look, and 30 seconds the second time. If you want to make it to the second look, your templates can help you stand out amongst the competition, and ensure that your resume lands a second and third look ...

  13. Access Resumes

    Resume Books allow employers to filter resumes by club affiliations, experience, interests, joint degree programs, language proficiency, and more, helping you find candidates best suited for your role and organization. ... Harvard Business School Wilder House Boston, MA 02163 Phone: 1.617.495.6232 Email: [email protected].

  14. PDF ACTION VERBS ORGANIZED BY SKILL SET

    your resume to effectively describe your skills and experiences. Author: Catherine Elliott Created Date: 2/21/2014 9:57:19 AM ...

  15. Resumes/CVs

    Sign in using your Harvard Key and check out the career development resources: short videos on a broad range of subjects including career planning, the job search, preparing your resume, plus topics around management and leadership. Resources Outside Harvard. Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC): Guide for the Academic Medicine CV.

  16. CREATE A STRONG RESUME

    Draft a resume using one of the MCS templates. Attend a Resume Workshop to learn the nuts and bolts of getting started. See the MCS events calendar for dates. View the recorded MCS Resume Webinar. Get advice via drop-ins, Monday-Friday, 1:00-4:00pm.

  17. Harvard College Bullet Point Resume Template

    Harvard College Bullet Point Resume Template. Word (.docx) version. Download or make a copy to edit (do not request edit access): Google Docs version. Use this bullet-point template to build out your first draft of your resume.

  18. Resume and Interview Assistance || St. Petersburg College

    Contact SPC's Career Development Services team who help students: Research employers to discover your employment value. Sell yourself with a professional resume and cover letters. Sharpen your interview skills and salary negotiating techniques. Build professional resumes, curricula vitae, cover letters and online portfolios.

  19. Category : Templates related to Saint Petersburg

    This category is used for categorizing templates. It should not contain media files or pages outside the template namespace. Internationalization. English: Templates related to the city of Saint Petersburg. Русский: Шаблоны, имеющие отношение к городу Санкт- ...

  20. Next Level

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  21. Professional Association of Resume Writers

    Professional Association of Resume Writers in Saint Petersburg, reviews by real people. Yelp is a fun and easy way to find, recommend and talk about what's great and not so great in Saint Petersburg and beyond.

  22. Access Resources

    The major platforms we provide to all FAS students are highlighted below. Additional digital resources can be viewed and filtered below. Our primary platform, Crimson Careers gives students access to scheduled advising, workshops, employer events, career fairs, as well as job, internship, and short-term project listings. Read More.

  23. Ryan S.

    Career Development Seasoned Development Professional with 5+ years of supporting students/employees work on their cover letters, finesse their resumes/CVs, create an outline of talking points for interviews/practice mock interviews, and refine their LinkedIn and professional websites; Co-Chair of the Development Committee for the American Public Health Association (Student Assembly); Candidate ...