Jump to section
How to add skills to your resume
For Business
Products
Build leaders that accelerate team performance and engagement.
Drive productivity through sustained well-being and mental health for all employees with BetterUp Care™.
Solutions
Transform your business, starting with your sales leaders.
Foster a culture of inclusion and belonging.
Customers
See how innovative companies use BetterUp to build a thriving workforce.
Resources
Best practices, research, and tools to fuel individual and business growth.
View on-demand BetterUp events and learn about upcoming live discussions.
The latest insights and ideas for building a high-performing workplace.
Innovative research featured in peer-reviewed journals, press, and more.
The best resume immediately answers a hiring manager's most pressing question: “Does this person have the necessary skills?”
You don’t have much time to answer this question, either. Recruiters scan a resume in just seven seconds to form a first impression and decide whether they’ll offer an interview.
You must understand the key skills for each job application and express your proficiency quickly to get ahead. We’ll discuss how to choose skills for a resume and add them effectively.
A skill is a knowledge, ability, or competency to perform specific tasks or respond to challenges. Each skill is either technical or interpersonal.
Technical skills refer to our ability to perform knowledge-based tasks, like proficiency with a graphic design program.
Interpersonal skills refer to our interactions with others, like our ability to tap into our emotional intelligence to manage a team or our leadership communication skills.
Learning new skills relevant to your job or reskilling to start a new career is crucial preparation. Every industry and job role requires proficiency in a wide range of job skills, so it's critical to know the most relevant ones for your profession and target the company and highlight them in your resume.
We recommend including a diverse set of skills on your resume. Choose a couple from each of the three main categories below:
This covers your competency to perform an action and apply that skill to different tasks, job roles, and industries. Your aptitude to perform a transferable or functional skill is measured by your ability to optimize this skill to various situations.
Transferable or functional skills include:
This covers personality traits, behaviors, or perspectives that guide your approach to a task or situation. These are skills you’ve developed since childhood through different life experiences.
Personality skills include:
This includes a theoretical or practical understanding of a specific task or process learned through consistent work experience or education. These are often industry or career-specific and, depending on the expertise required for a particular position, the most in-demand.
Knowledge-based skills include:
The above skills can be divided into technical versus interpersonal skills, but they can also be categorized as soft or hard. Knowledge-based skills might fall into either category.
Soft skills are general and apply to various jobs, work environments, and situations. They inform how we approach a task or challenge and are unique personal attributes that make us stand out and succeed as employees and leaders.
Here are a few soft skills you could include on your resume:
Hard skills are gained through experience, practice, and education. They can be measured straightforwardly by our ability to perform a technical task.
Here are a few hard skills you could include on your resume:
Soft and hard skills often complement one another. Speaking a foreign language is a hard skill requiring specific vocabulary, diction, and grammar knowledge. The communication skills needed to speak this language effectively — knowing how to work through a concept, tell a story, and keep an audience engaged — are soft skills.
There are endless resume templates to choose from when designing your resume, and most offer a skills section. We’ve outlined four tips for adding skills to catch a recruiter's attention with resume skills examples to help you get started.
Study the company by visiting its website, LinkedIn profile, and other public sources. What values do they promote? Which team members do they highlight and why?
Read through the job ad and take note of the responsibilities, job requirements, and skills listed by the employer. Use this research to choose skills for your resume. It’s a good idea to list skills the job posting specifically seeks.
Here’s an example of how to translate a job responsibility into skills when describing work experience on your resume:
Responsibility: Fact-check, proofread, and edit content for accuracy and comprehensiveness.
Skill on resume:
If a hiring manager spends just seven seconds on a resume, make sure yours is readable. Design the resume to direct the reader's eye to critical information, and include a skills section close to the start. Use relevant action verbs to sell your experience and describe your skills from the beginning.
Don't over-clutter — insufficient white space will deflect the eye rather than attract it. This section should include bullet points with concise information.
Sneak skills throughout your resume, including in the summary and work experience sections. Frequently referencing them will help show the hiring manager you really do possess the skills.
Here are two examples of a writer's position:
Resume summary with a mixture of transferable and personal skills:
Work experience section with a mixture of technical and interpersonal skills:
Digital Content Writer, [Company name], [time frame]
Always be clear about your level of expertise. You’ll likely be asked to showcase some of your skills in an interview, so it’s best to be upfront.
Here are a few examples:
Languages spoken:
Tools
We recommend choosing transferable, knowledge-based, and personal skills relevant to the job description and the company’s values. When in doubt, you can’t go wrong using these three skills on your resume:
If you have any managerial experience, add it to the relevant job description. Good managers can see the bigger picture, organize their teams around a common goal, and demonstrate effective communication techniques.
This experience also shows you’re willing to take on more responsibility and can handle different personalities.
Expressing your management skills might look like this:
Strong communication skills are essential at every professional level. These skills include actively listening, speaking effectively, observing people and situations, and empathizing and supporting our co-workers, colleagues, and managers.
Expressing your communication skills might look like this:
Expertise in various technologies or the ability to learn new ones are great hard skills to advertise. These include knowledge of hardware, software, work platforms, or coding languages.
Computer skills might include:
Building a good resume takes a lot of work. You have to read through the job description and tailor resumes to each post to make sure your profile best aligns with what the recruiter is looking for.
But the effort is worth it. You've spent your entire career learning and nurturing new skills — show them off in your resume and you'll be one step closer to getting the job. You’ve worked hard to get where you are, and listing the right skills will help hiring managers see that.
Managing Editor
Products
Solutions
Customers