10 Resume Mistakes That Cost You the Interview

10 Resume Mistakes That Cost You the Interview

Recruiters spend an average of six to eight seconds on a first-pass resume scan. In those seconds, certain mistakes guarantee your resume gets moved to the reject pile – regardless of how qualified you are.

After reviewing tens of thousands of resumes, we see the same fixable mistakes again and again. Here are the ten most common, ranked by how often they cost candidates the interview.

1. Generic Objective Statements

“Seeking a challenging position that leverages my skills” tells the recruiter nothing. Replace it with a one-line summary that names the role, the years of experience, and one signature achievement.

2. “Responsible For” Bullets

“Responsible for managing the team” is a job description, not an accomplishment. Rewrite as: “Led a team of 8 engineers; shipped 4 product launches, reducing customer churn 23%.”

3. No Metrics

If your bullets do not contain numbers, percentages, or measurable outcomes, you’re asking the recruiter to guess at your impact. Even rough estimates (“approximately 30% improvement”) beat vague claims.

4. Wrong Length

Junior or mid-career: one page. Senior or executive: two pages. Multi-page resumes for entry-level roles signal lack of editing judgment.

5. Bad Email Address

If your email is partyboy91@hotmail.com, change it. Use firstname.lastname@gmail.com or buy your own domain.

6. Photo on a US Resume

In the US and UK, photos can trigger anti-discrimination concerns and many recruiters discard photo resumes immediately. In Europe, Asia, and Latin America, photos are standard. Match the convention for your target market.

7. Wall-of-Text Bullets

Any bullet over two lines is too long. Cut to one sentence with a verb, an action, and an outcome.

8. Listing Every Job Since High School

Cut anything older than ten to fifteen years unless it’s directly relevant. Focus the recruiter’s attention on the work that argues for the next role.

9. Typos

One typo is often forgiven. Two suggests carelessness. Three is disqualifying. Read aloud or have a friend proof.

10. Same Resume for Every Application

Generic resumes have generic results. Tailor the top third of the resume (summary, top skills, most-recent bullets) to the specific job description.

The good news: every one of these is fixable in an evening. The candidates who beat you to the interview are the ones who actually did the fixing.

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