There are more ways to quantify your achievements on a resume than you might think. Stay with us as we look at the possibilities.
But first, let’s discuss why this extra measure is so highly and widely recommended by career experts. Of what benefit is it to quantify your resume?
Adding numbers to your resume’s employment history section utilizes another key piece of advice: Frame your work experience highlights as achievements or contributions, not a passive list of duties. Tell what you did, not what you were responsible for. Hand in hand with that comes results.
Measurable outcomes are the most effective way to show the beneficial impact of your work thus far, and what you’re capable of delivering next.“This is what I’ll do for you if hired” is the message they send about your potential value to prospective employers.
Here are some specific ways that quantified resume bullets can give you an edge:
A survey of hiring managers indicated that 34% pass over resumes with few or no measurable results. View more resume statistics.
Compare the difference between these bullet points before and after numbers are added. The first version describes tasks you performed, but without indicating why they were important or their impact.
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Taking the recruiter’s perspective when tailoring your resume ensures the accomplishments you choose to highlight are relevant as well as impressive. How to quantify them accordingly may be self-evident, or that could even be a basis for selecting them. The “STAR” method is an effective way to write concise, one-line descriptions depicting a situation, task, action, and result.
In addition to the bullet points listed in your resume’s employment history section, including one or two quantified achievements in the summary upfront can make a powerful first impression on recruiters.
Below are some commonly used metrics that employers pay attention to on a resume.
A “wins journal” can be useful to track measurable work achievements as they happen. Amanda Augustine at TopResume recommends any form of “brag book” that you find convenient and handy to log all manner of confidence boosters when they are fresh on your mind — tasks well done, accolades earned or any kind of success story. You’ll thank yourself for the time and effort saved when the need arises to update and quantify your resume.
If you have no need to be preoccupied with numbers on the job, and no access to hard data, you’re in good company. Still, it’s not impossible to give your resume a quantifiable dimension.
Below are three ways that almost all job seekers could bolster their resume’s impact with numbers.
Don’t know exactly how many customers you greeted, shelves you stocked, yoga students you taught, or walls you painted? It’s perfectly fine to be imprecise, giving a range of numbers — your best guesstimate.
Perhaps in tandem with range, most people can approximate how often they perform certain job tasks. Simply indicate the number of actions performed, clients served, students tutored, or items produced, etc., within any applicable time span: per hour, shift, week, month or year.
Scale indicators help employers understand the relative importance of your past accomplishments by adding context and perspective.
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For inspiration and ideas, check out Resume.io’s collection of 350+ occupation-specific resume examples and writing guides.