Key takeaways
- A strong bullet shows the work, context, scale, and result without inventing ownership.
- Use employer language only when it truthfully describes your experience.
- Keep private evidence so every number and claim can be explained in an interview.
Build the evidence inventory before the resume
For each role, project, volunteer activity, class, or caregiving responsibility, list the problem, people served, tools, decisions, constraints, volume, time, quality, money, and outcome. Save performance reviews, non-confidential reports, awards, work samples, and notes that support the claim.
Do not copy confidential customer, employer, health, security, or financial data into a personal file. Aggregate or describe scale only when permitted and accurate.
Write with a four-part test
Not every bullet needs a dollar or percentage. Completion time, error reduction, service volume, reliability, adoption, safety, or stakeholder feedback can be specific evidence when measured honestly.
| Part | Question |
|---|---|
| Action | What did you personally do? |
| Object | What process, customer, product, system, or deliverable changed? |
| Context or scale | How many, how often, how complex, under what constraint? |
| Result | What improved, completed, avoided, learned, or enabled? |
Match the target without keyword stuffing
- 1
Highlight duties, tools, outcomes, and minimum qualifications in the posting.
- 2
Map each requirement to direct, adjacent, or learning evidence.
- 3
Use the employer’s ordinary terminology when it accurately matches your work.
- 4
Prioritize the strongest relevant evidence near the top of each role.
- 5
Remove irrelevant bullets rather than hiding keywords in white text or graphics.
Keep ownership and numbers honest
- Say ‘contributed,’ ‘coordinated,’ or ‘supported’ when the result belonged to a team.
- State whether a number is an exact record, reasonable estimate, or range—and use only defensible estimates.
- Do not convert a budget you touched into money you personally saved.
- Separate a process outcome from the organization’s broader outcome.
- Prepare a short interview story and evidence source for every consequential claim.
Format for reading and parsing
CareerOneStop’s work-experience guide recommends relevant tasks and accomplishments with context and outcomes. Its formatting guidance favors clear headings, consistent layout, and simple structures that human readers and applicant systems can parse.
Export to the requested file format, then reopen it and copy the text into a plain editor to check reading order. Use a clear filename and remove comments, tracked changes, hidden metadata, and unrelated personal information before sending.
Evidence record
Sources and methodology
We used primary public sources for the factual framework, then wrote and structured this guide independently. Links are checked during editorial review and when a guide is substantively updated.
- Work Experience — Resume GuideCareerOneStop, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor · Used for: Accomplishment, context, and outcome guidance
- Formatting — Resume GuideCareerOneStop, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Labor · Used for: Readable and ATS-compatible resume structure
This article is general educational information, not individualized financial, medical, legal, tax, cybersecurity, construction, or career advice.