CVs are always an essential job search tool for selling yourself to prospective employers. But when your sights are set on a selling position, the stakes are even higher. Luckily, we can help you to ‘wow’ recruiters with our ultra-persuasive sales CV example.
With help and advice from Resume.io, there’s no need to fret. Our resources include a growing library of occupation-specific writing guides with corresponding CV examples.
This guide is designed for sales job seekers. Stay with us as we take you through a proven CV-writing process, backed by sample wording from a sales CV. Here’s what we’ll cover:
It’s all in the name. Sales professionals are in the business of selling. However, that's a deceptively simple answer to the question of what they do, given the vast spectrum of job opportunities and career path options at every level of sales experience.
According to pareto.co.uk:
However, leading job sites report the following averages for sales representatives:
It's important to keep in mind that a great many factors may impact how much money you make when you work in sales.
From retail, finance, IT, and manufacturing to healthcare, real estate, and vacation travel, virtually all industries have a product or service sales component. Competition-driven incentives are a common denominator, wherever your specialised interests and expertise lie. Whether you’re keen on selling bicycles, retirement funds, gaming software, club memberships or building supplies, the sales labour force will have openings.
Hubspot.com categorises sales job types as follows:
Relatively speaking, sales job earnings are above average, but vary depending on levels of education, experience and difficulty. The same goes for commission rates relative to base salaries.
For more ideas, check out these writing guides and CV examples for other occupations:
Next up, let’s look at how to start writing your sales CV. No matter what kind of sales job you are pursuing, and however well-matched your qualifications, the same universally used CV structure applies. These are the essential sections that all CVs should have in common:
Keeping this structure in mind should help you stay focused when organising your sales CV content. And there’s a vital end-product consideration that may require selective cherry-picking: Everything you decide to include should fit on a single page.
If that sounds daunting, here’s one more guidepost for hitting the mark: Each version of your CV should be targeted to the specific job you are applying for. Pinpoint the most directly relevant qualifications as the basis for narrowing the angle. Leave out any information that recruiters are far less interested in.
To customise each version of your CV, scour the posted job application requirements and make sure you’ve got them covered. Certain keywords will likely stand out — many specific to your sales background.
Matching these keywords precisely in your CV wording is also the key to Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) optimisation. This gives your resume the best chance of passing through the digital filters that are typically used by hiring organisations to screen online applications.
Almost always, the chronological CV format is recommended for sales professionals. It’s also what recruiters prefer to easily review your work history as bullet-point descriptions below employer headings. These are listed by date in reverse chronological order, starting with your current or most recent position and working backwards.
There are other options, however, if prospective employers are more interested in what you can do than where you’ve worked. In that case, consider the functional CV format, focusing on specific sales skills or even clients. Or opt for a combination CV format, with both chronological and functional elements.
A distinctive header design sets your job application apart from all the rest. It can have double the impact when your CV and cover letter are a visually matched pair.
Practically speaking, the header draws the reader’s eye to the place on the page where your name, occupation and contact information appear, creating a memorable first impression. The white-space separation from black body text adds eye appeal. Above all, the header information’s prominence makes it easy for recruiters to revisit your CV for shortlisting and extending an interview invitation.
Your CV profile — otherwise known as the summary or personal statement — is a written elevator pitch for being this employer’s dream hire. As an up-front value proposition, it captures your most relevant sales qualifications in an irresistible manner. Being just a brief synopsis, it intrigues readers just enough to keep reading for further details.
A sense of your sales-winning personality should also confidently come across in the profile. It’s the only CV section that allows you to express your purpose and passion as a sales professional.
Below is a sales CV summary example you can customise.
Highly dynamic Senior Sales Representative with a proven track record of achieving maximum sales profitability and account penetration for assigned regions. Committed to working hard to establish new business and maintain existing customer relationships.
Tell your story so far with your employment history section. Again, your CV’s effectiveness hinges on the effort you make to zero in on what hiring managers are keenly interested in. Speak the employer’s language in the selling context of its needs and values.
As affirmed in a simplysalesjobs.co.uk blog, every successful sales close begins with a full understanding of the customer’s needs and motivations. That’s essential to position your products or services precisely where they need to be — as a solution.
The same holds true when presenting yourself to prospective employers as the right hiring solution.
Create results-oriented descriptions of your sales accomplishments — not merely job descriptions or vague assurances of meeting your targets and quotas.
Recruiters want hard evidence of the numbers behind your success stories: revenue and sales unit increases, quota percentages, closing ratios, profit boosts, new customer growth, customer retention rates, and the like.
Below is a sales employment history CV sample you can modify.
Senior Sales Representative at Bellinger, Oxford
June 2017 - Present
Oxford Sales Representative at Ledmore Suppliers
Mar 2013 - May 2017
Sales jobs are largely talent-based. With that in mind, name four to seven of your most valuable secrets to sales success. It should be a winning combination of learned abilities and innate personal attributes. This can be your foundation for an impressive CV skills list.
Before finalising, be sure to check your list against the employer’s job posting before to make sure you’ve covered the essentials in this hiring situation. Your CV skills list is a further opportunity to incorporate keywords, as an ATS-proofing safeguard and to show your awareness of employer priorities.
Check out a sales CV sample for the skills section below.
Specific qualifications aren’t always necessary for salespeople. However, you should share your education history. List your post-secondary education in reverse chronological order, from highest to lowest level. High school information should only be included in the absence of university and college degrees or diplomas.
This CV section is also the place to list internships, other types of on-the-job training, certifications, and any relevant continuing education. That might include industry-recognized Institute of Sales Management (ISM) qualifications, up to the level 6 equivalent of a university degree.
Below is the education section from a sales CV example.
Associate of Science in Marketing, University College, Oxford
Sep 2010 - May 2012
For the same reason, appearance has make or break importance in a face-to-face sales scenario, your CV document needs to look the part of a professional on all counts.
Cluttered and chaotic is hardly the impression you’d want to give prospective clients about your capabilities or the integrity of the product or service you are selling. The same goes for your sales CV, which should be visually spotless and orderly.
These CV layout and design guidelines will help you achieve a polished result that’s a sight for recruiters’ sore eyes.
Using a premade CV template with Resume.io’s builder tool can save you time, guesswork and hassle. Check out our design collection in four design categories and choose one that harmonises with the hiring organisation’s brand.