Get UX design resume tips from UX career coach Sarah Doody. Find out how to design a UX resume that attracts hiring managers.
Renee Fleck
Written by Renee Fleck
Published on
Last updated
In UX and design, there’s an immense amount of focus put on the portfolio, and justifiably so. Your UX design portfolio is likely where most recruiters and hiring managers spend the most time. Why? Because your portfolio is like evidence in a legal case. It provides evidence that you have the skills that they are looking for.
However, a huge mistake that many UX and design professionals make is that they leave their resume until last, or don’t give it any attention at all.
The reality is that recruiters and hiring managers pay attention to and evaluate all of your content — your resume, LinkedIn profile, and your portfolio. It’s worth stating again, it’s not just about your portfolio!
If you have an excellent portfolio yet your resume is a disaster, what does that say about you? First impressions matter across all of the content that goes along with your application.
To create an awesome UX designer resume that stands out, you will need to understand:
- What the user of your resume is looking for
- The anatomy of your resume
- Mistakes you don’t want to make in your resume
- A few strategic tips to help you stand out
- If you really need to try and format it to be read by applicant tracking systems
Applying UX principles to your resume
After reviewing hundreds of UX resumes from students in my UX Portfolio Formula programs, I’ve noticed a common problem, too many designers do not consider the UX of their resume!
As designers and user experience professionals, there’s a tendency to either:
- Overly design the resume to the point that it’s a distraction from the actual content
- Give no regard to the design of the resume, making it extremely difficult for the reader
The good news is there’s a happy medium, and this starts with understanding the user of your resume. Put yourself in their shoes — remember they are busy people! Hiring managers and freelance design clients sometimes have hundreds of applicants for each role. They aren’t literally going to read every word on your design resume. They are going to quickly skim and scan it to determine if they even should look at your portfolio or invite you for an initial chat.
So what are the needs of the reader of your resume? What are their goals? What information are they looking for?
Anatomy of your resume: section by section
To help make your resume as scannable and readable as possible for the user, you need to consider the questions that the reader wants to find the answers to on your resume. Questions such as:
- What does this person do?
- Where have they worked?
- What have they done?
- What types of projects have they worked on?
- What are they skilled at?
- What’s their education?
- What’s unique about them?
Armed with these questions, you can more easily identify the sections that your resume should have and the hierarchy of information that people are looking for. When someone quickly scans or glances at your resume, there is key information that you want to stand out.
Mistakes, misconceptions, and myths about your resume
The questions my UX Portfolio Formula students ask about designing a resume and what to include have made it clear that there are a lot of myths and misunderstandings on the topic. Let’s address some of these trends because some of them are instant turn-offs for recruiters and hiring managers:
1. Do not limit your resume to one page
I don’t know who started this myth, but it’s not true. Trying to put everything on one page will 99% of the time, mean that you’re compromising the readability of your resume. You’ll make the font size smaller to fit it on one page. Or worse, you’ll leave out information, only scratching the surface of what you did for each role.
So how long should your resume be? It depends. A resume that’s two pages, but has small fonts and poor spacing could feel long. The same resume could span three or four pages, but with proper font size and spacing, it will be much more readable and scannable.
2. Do not include charts or graphs of your skills
There’s a trend right now in resumes to visualize and rank your skills. The problem is that what you consider to be an “expert” in, is your opinion. The hiring manager’s standard for what qualifies as “expert” may be totally different. It’s subjective. Stop ranking your skills.
3. Do not overly design your UX resume
Excessive design on your resume only distracts people from the content. Your resume is not the time to flex your design skills. Less is more. Don’t use watermarks, excessive iconography, a personal logo, whimsical or too many fonts, multiple colors, or excessive emojis.
To create a stand-out resume, do these 3 things:
The resume is often the first line of defense. It gets the first glance, along with your LinkedIn profile. The quality of your resume, including both the content and the formatting of it, can be the deciding factor for whether or not you move to the next step.
To increase the chances that your resume stands out, do these 3 things:
1. Tailor your UX resume to each role you apply to
Before you apply to UX design jobs, you should devour the job description because that’s where you can find out exactly what recruiters and hiring managers are looking for. Based on what you find in the job description, use this to tailor your resume for each role. By tailoring you could:
- Remove irrelevant information
- Re-write bullet points so key skills or experience stands out
- Rearrange information based on what they’re looking for
2. Think of yourself as a product
The company is hiring you to do a job for them. What do great products do? They don’t just talk about their features. Instead, they highlight their benefits. By benefits, focus on the outcomes you’ve achieved. For past projects you worked on, what happened? What was the benefit to the team, business, or product?
An example bullet point on your resume might say:
“I was responsible for creating the user-flows and wireframes.”
That’s pretty generic. That’s talking about “features” and you need to go deeper. What other context can you provide to let people know more about what project? Instead, you could write:
“I was responsible for redesigning the checkout user-flow, and creating wireframes for the new mobile experience. This helped increase checkout conversion by 0.5% which resulted in an additional $100,000 monthly revenue.”
This tells much more of a story around what you did for that project. It provides context and it also addresses benefits and outcomes of the work you did.
Quick tip: Lean on your past case studies to see what wins you can pull that might be worth including in your resume. If you need support writing better case studies, check out this free Google Doc Case Study Template.
3. Include a title and a personal elevator pitch
Oftentimes, especially in UX, job titles mean different things to different people. Ask 10 people what a “UX Designer” specifically does, and you’ll get 10 different answers. I recommend that you not only give yourself some type of title, but also have an elevator pitch. Your title quickly lets people know what you do at a high level. The elevator pitch helps clarify exactly what you do, and what you don’t do. With Dribbble Pro Business, you can use the power of video to create a client-facing elevator pitch that lives right on your Dribbble Portfolio.
The personal elevator pitch is also a great place to give a glimpse of your personality or any other differentiating information such as languages you speak, or industries you’re well versed in. Highlight various information that may apply specifically to the role you’re applying to, because from now on you’ll tailor your resume to each role you apply to!
First impressions matter, so don’t rush your UX resume!
You will be judged by the quality of your UX design resume.
If you can’t give enough care to making it readable, establishing hierarchy, organizing information, and applying basic visual design principles, then what does that say about the work you’ll do if you’re hired?
Although the resume may not get you hired, it can be an instant turn-off if it’s hard to read, too long, doesn’t go into enough detail, or is overly designed.
To truly stand out, you must make sure your resume has the right balance of content and design. By considering the user of your UX resume and writing and designing the content to meet their needs, you’ll be far more likely to stand out. Good luck!
Written by Renee Fleck
Published on
Last updated