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Resumes have changed. Here's what job seekers need to know.

Many Americans are on the job hunt.

There are job seekers who lost a job in the rash of tech layoffs in the past few months, those eager to ramp up pay with a job switch, and retirees who have decided to unretire.

One thing they should all have in common: a new resume.

“Over the last five years, the employment landscape has changed, and so has the way job seekers write resumes,” Eric Ciechanowski, a career expert at LiveCareer, an online resume and job search consulting service, told Yahoo Finance.

Job hunting takes pluck, but writing a resume — particularly if you haven’t done one in a number of years— can be, in a word, paralyzing. There’s no way around it, though, as your resume is your calling card and your sizzle reel.

I reached out to a handful of experts for their insights on constructing a resume for today’s hiring landscape and have included some of my own as well.

The challenge is to grab attention straight away.

Once your resume reaches a human resource manager, more than a third of them spend less than a minute initially looking at it, according to a survey from CareerBuilder. Nearly 1 in 5 spend less than 30 seconds.

Close up view of female HR recruiter taking notes while reading job applicant resume in the office. Recruitment and hiring concept.
Nearly 1 in 5 human resource specialists say they spend less than 30 seconds reviewing a resume. (Getty Creative) · Xavier Lorenzo via Getty Images

A two-page resume is the norm

Your resume is an advertisement, not an obituary. In other words, it should hit the highlights, not list all your life accomplishments.

Resumes have expanded in recent years. The average resume has nearly doubled from one page to two, and the average word count has increased from 312 words in 2018 to 503 in 2023, according to a recent report from LiveCareer.

That said, cherry-pick your professional experience. What employers want to see is your most recent 10 to 15 years of experience. No one wants to read every one of your job entries, for instance, if they run over a two-decade or longer career.

Bundle your earlier experiences into one tidy paragraph and skip dates. Use only the work history that’s germane to the job you’re applying for now.

The automated-hiring technology known as Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) carves out the throngs of applications and resumes employers typically receive for a single open position, so grease the wheels.

Eliminate college or high school graduation dates. Remove jobs that lasted less than six months. Avoid quirky job titles, which could jettison you from a recruiter’s search criteria. “Wordsmith,” for instance, is unlikely to show up in an ATS search for the specific keyword “editor.”

Where to add value

The core sections of a resume are your contact information, professional summary, work experience, and skills and education. But the number of job seekers who tack on extra sections has doubled, per the LiveCareer report.