How to Write the Perfect CV
In today’s job market, your CV (Curriculum Vitae) is more than just a list of where you’ve worked—it’s your personal marketing brochure. With recruiters spending an average of only 6 to 10 seconds scanning a CV before deciding if it goes in the "yes" or "no" pile, every word counts.
Here is your step-by-step guide to crafting a CV that stands out and gets you the interview.
1. The Foundation: Layout and Formatting
Before a recruiter reads a single word, they see the layout. If it looks cluttered, they’ll move on.
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Keep it Brief: Aim for two pages maximum.
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Font Choice: Use clean, professional fonts like Arial, Calibri, or Helvetica (10–12pt).
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White Space: Use generous margins and clear headings to make the document "scannable."
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PDF is King: Always save your CV as a PDF to ensure the formatting stays exactly how you intended.
2. The Structure: What to Include
A perfect CV generally follows this logical flow:
| Section | What it should cover |
| Contact Info | Name, phone number, professional email, and LinkedIn profile. |
| Personal Profile | A 3–4 sentence "elevator pitch" highlighting who you are and what you offer. |
| Core Skills | A bulleted list of your top 6–8 hard and soft skills. |
| Experience | Your work history in reverse chronological order (most recent first). |
| Education | Degrees, certifications, and relevant training. |
3. Focus on Achievements, Not Just Duties
The biggest mistake most candidates make is listing their job descriptions. Recruiters already know what a "Sales Manager" does; they want to know how well you did it.
Use the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) to quantify your impact:
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Weak: "Responsible for increasing social media engagement."
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Strong: "Boosted Instagram engagement by 25% over 6 months by implementing a new video-first content strategy."
4. Optimise for the Bots (ATS)
Many large companies use Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) to filter CVs. To beat the bots:
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Keyword Match: Mirror the language used in the job description. If they ask for "Project Management," don’t just write "Leading teams."
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Standard Headings: Stick to simple titles like "Work Experience" rather than "Where I’ve Been."
5. The Final Polish
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Proofread: A single typo can signal a lack of attention to detail. Use tools like Grammarly, but also read it out loud.
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Link Your Portfolio: If you’re in a creative or technical field, include a link to your GitHub, Behance, or personal website.
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No Photos: Unless you are a model or actor, skip the headshot. It can trigger unconscious bias and mess with ATS software.
Pro Tip: Customize your CV for every application. A generic CV is a forgettable CV.