The Resume Rules Have Changed

In 2026, a resume isn't really a document. It's a data file that gets parsed, scored, and ranked before a human ever sees it. The rules that made a resume competitive in 2020 actively hurt you now. Over-designed templates, objective statements, and "responsible for" bullet points are red flags to modern ATS systems and to the recruiters who skim what the ATS surfaces.

This guide gives you the 2026 standard. What to include, what to cut, how to structure it, and how to tailor it for every role without starting from scratch every time.

Related reading: French CV Guide 2026: How to Write a Curriculum Vitae That Gets Interviews in France · German Lebenslauf Guide 2026: How to Write a CV That Gets Interviews in Germany · UAE CV Guide 2026: How to Write a Resume That Gets Interviews in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

The Non-Negotiable Structure

Every strong resume in 2026 follows this order:

  • Contact information — name, city/country, phone, email, LinkedIn URL, portfolio (if relevant)
  • Professional summary — 2–3 sentences, role-specific, result-focused
  • Skills — hard skills and tools first, organised by category
  • Work experience — reverse chronological, achievement bullets only
  • Education — degree, institution, graduation year (GPA only if above 3.7 and within 3 years of graduation)
  • Certifications / Projects — only if relevant to the target role

The Professional Summary: 3 Sentences That Open Doors

The professional summary replaces the old "objective statement" and does one job: tell the reader why you're the right person for this specific role in three sentences. Sentence 1: your role and years of experience. Sentence 2: your biggest relevant achievement (with a number). Sentence 3: what you bring to this specific type of role.

Bad: "Dynamic professional seeking a challenging role where I can use my skills."

Good: "Product Manager with 6 years of experience building B2B SaaS products. Grew ARR from $2M to $11M over 3 years at [Company] by leading a team of 8 across design, engineering, and data. Known for turning complex customer problems into clean product roadmaps that engineering teams love to build."

Achievement Bullets: The Formula

Every bullet point under work experience should follow this formula: [Strong verb] + [what you did] + [result with number]. If you can't quantify the result, describe the scope or impact qualitatively — but always lead with what changed because of your work.

Replace "Managed social media accounts" with "Grew LinkedIn page from 2K to 28K followers in 8 months by launching a weekly video series, driving 340% increase in inbound leads."

One page or two? It depends on your seniority

One page for under 7 years of experience. Two pages for 7+ years. Never exceed two pages, not because it's a rule but because every line competes for a recruiter's 7-second attention budget. If a line doesn't directly support your case for the role, cut it. Be ruthless. The instinct is always to add. The discipline is to subtract.

Formatting Rules That Beat ATS

  • Use a clean single-column layout — no tables, no text boxes
  • Standard fonts only: Calibri, Arial, Georgia, or similar
  • Section headers in plain text (not inside shapes or graphics)
  • Save as PDF (unless the job posting specifies Word)
  • File name: FirstName-LastName-Resume.pdf

Tailoring: The Step Most People Skip

Sending the same resume to every job is the fastest path to rejection. For each application, spend 10 minutes. Extract 5 to 7 keywords from the job description. Check your resume uses those exact words. Update your professional summary to reference the role title. AI career tools like Talenlio automate this in seconds, scanning the JD, identifying missing keywords, and updating your resume before you apply.

A great resume isn't a document you write once and re-send. It's a living file. Treat it that way and your callback rate doubles. Treat it like a static PDF and you'll wonder for months why no one's responding.