The 6-Second Reality

Eye-tracking studies by Ladders show that recruiters spend an average of 6.25 seconds on the first resume review before sorting it into yes or no. In that time, they're scanning specific places for specific information. Understanding that pattern lets you design a resume that earns a second, deeper look.

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What They Look at First

The Ladders study identified the specific elements that get the most attention on first screening, in order:

  1. Name and contact information
  2. Current job title and company
  3. Current position start and end dates
  4. Previous job title and company
  5. Previous position start and end dates
  6. Education

Notice this list does NOT include your summary, your skills, your achievements, or anything else. In six seconds, they're assessing the basic framework of your career. Title, company, dates. If a recruiter can't identify those in two seconds, your resume failed the first test.

What Triggers a Deeper Read

A recruiter spends six seconds on initial scan. If the framework passes, they go back for a deeper read. The triggers are: recognisable company names, relevant job titles, quantified achievements in the first bullet of each role, a concise keyword-rich summary, and clean professional formatting. The number in the first bullet is what most often pulls the eye back to read more.

The ATS Pre-Screen

Before human eyes see your resume at a large company, it passes through ATS. The ATS looks for keyword matches against the JD, correct date formatting, parseable contact information, and standard section headings. A resume that fails ATS never reaches the 6-second human scan. ATS optimisation and human readability must both be achieved at once. They aren't mutually exclusive, despite what some resume templates would have you believe.

Red Flags That Cause Immediate Rejection

  • Unexplained employment gaps — Large unlabelled gaps raise concerns
  • Job hopping — Multiple roles under 1 year without explanation
  • Mismatched job titles — A "Marketing Manager" applying for a "Software Engineer" role with no context
  • Poor formatting — Difficult to read, inconsistent fonts, cluttered layout
  • Typos and errors — Signals carelessness that extends beyond the resume
  • Unquantified experience — No numbers anywhere suggests no meaningful impact

What Makes Recruiters Champion a Resume

A recruiter becomes your advocate when your resume makes them look good for surfacing you. This happens when your background clearly matches the role, your achievements are specific, your career progression makes sense, and the overall presentation is sharp. A friend who'd been at three startups in five years was getting auto-rejected on every application. She added two-line context under each entry explaining why each move happened (acquihire, founder pivot, family relocation). The same recruiter who'd ignored her three weeks earlier responded within a day. Context is everything.

Design for the six-second scan first. Optimise for the deeper read second. Both matter, but the first six seconds decide whether the deeper read ever happens. If your name and current role aren't visible inside two seconds of opening the PDF, the rest of the resume is never going to be read.