Global CV & Resume Guide — International Application Documents
Your CV is your first — and often only — chance to make an impression. In a market where a strong role receives 200+ applications and recruiters spend an average of 7 seconds on initial screening, the difference between a great CV and a forgettable one is the difference between an interview and a rejection. This guide gives you the complete framework to write one that works.
CV Structure & Format
The right structure depends on your career stage, industry, and the country you're applying in. We cover every format — chronological, functional, hybrid — and when to use each one.
ATS Optimisation
Over 95% of large employers use Applicant Tracking Systems to filter CVs before a human sees them. Understanding how they work — and how to get through them — is now a fundamental job search skill.
Writing That Gets Interviews
The difference between a CV that gets calls and one that doesn't is almost entirely in the writing — specifically, how well you communicate impact with evidence rather than just listing responsibilities.
📐 CV Formats — Choosing the Right Structure for Your Situation
There is no single "correct" CV format. The right format depends on your career history, the role you're targeting, and the country you're applying in. Here is a complete breakdown.
⭐ Reverse Chronological
Lists your most recent experience first, working backwards. The most widely accepted format globally. Preferred by recruiters because it shows career progression immediately.
Best for: Most job seekers with consistent work history
🧩 Functional (Skills-Based)
Leads with skills and capabilities rather than work history. Useful for career changers or those with employment gaps — but viewed with suspicion by many recruiters.
Best for: Career changers, returners after long gaps
🔀 Hybrid / Combination
Opens with a skills summary, then follows with reverse-chronological experience. Gets the benefits of both formats without the drawbacks of a purely functional CV.
Best for: Experienced professionals, senior roles
| Country | Preferred Term | Typical Length | Photo? | Key Differences |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 🇬🇧 United Kingdom | CV | 2 pages | No | No photos, no date of birth; personal statement expected; references "available on request" |
| 🇺🇸 United States | Resume | 1–2 pages | No | No photos, no DOB, no marital status; achievements-focused; objective statement common |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | Resume / CV | 2–4 pages | No | Selection criteria responses often required; referee details included; more detail expected |
| 🇩🇪 Germany | Lebenslauf | 2 pages | Yes (professional headshot) | Photo standard; personal details section; Bewerbungsmappe (full application pack) common |
| 🇫🇷 France | CV | 1–2 pages | Usually yes | Photo accepted; personal details standard; cover letter (lettre de motivation) essential |
| 🇮🇳 India | CV / Resume / Biodata | 2–3 pages | Often yes | Biodata format used in some sectors; objective statement standard; family details sometimes included in traditional sectors |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | Resume | 1–2 pages | No | Similar to US format; bilingual (English/French) versions needed in Quebec; no age/photo |
| 🇳🇿 New Zealand | CV | 2–3 pages | No | Cover letter essential; referee details included; employer-focused language preferred |
🔬 Anatomy of a High-Performing CV — Section by Section
Every section of your CV has a specific job to do. Here is exactly what to include in each one, with examples of strong versus weak writing for each.
Alexandra Chen — Senior Product Manager
London, UK · [email protected] · linkedin.com/in/alexchen · +44 7700 000000
Senior Product Manager with 8 years building B2B SaaS products used by 2M+ users. Led cross-functional teams of 12 to deliver 3 platform launches generating £18M combined ARR. Specialism in data-informed roadmap prioritisation and enterprise go-to-market.
- Launched analytics module adopted by 340 enterprise clients within 6 months, contributing £4.2M in new ARR
- Reduced customer churn by 22% through discovery-led roadmap restructure across 3 product lines
- Built and managed cross-functional squad of 12 (engineering, design, data) with 94% on-time delivery rate
Personal Details — What to Include and What to Leave Out
Include: full name (prominently), professional email, phone number, location (city and country — not full address), LinkedIn profile URL, and portfolio/GitHub link where relevant. Omit in UK/US/AU: date of birth, marital status, nationality, religion, photo. These are legally protected characteristics that should not influence hiring and including them can actually disadvantage you with some employers who follow strict blind-screening practices.
Professional Summary — Your 5-Second Hook
A 3–4 sentence paragraph at the top of your CV that summarises who you are professionally, your key experience, and your most compelling achievement. It should be tailored to each role. Avoid clichés like "results-driven professional" or "passionate team player" — these appear in 80% of CVs and read as filler. The formula: [Years of experience] + [Specialism] + [Most impressive quantified achievement] + [What you want to bring to the reader].
💡 This section is read first — make every word earn its placeWork Experience — Achievements, Not Responsibilities
The most common CV mistake is listing what you were responsible for rather than what you achieved. Recruiters already know what a "Sales Manager" is responsible for. What they want to know is: what did YOU achieve in that role? Use the CAR framework: Challenge → Action → Result. Every bullet point should ideally contain a quantified result. If you can't quantify exactly, use directional language: "significantly reduced", "doubled", "eliminated".
✗ Responsibilities-Led (Weak)
- Responsible for managing the sales team
- Handled customer accounts across the region
- Worked on new business development
- Attended weekly management meetings
✓ Achievement-Led (Strong)
- Led 8-person sales team to 134% of annual quota, highest in UK region
- Grew key account revenue by £1.2M (31%) through structured QBR programme
- Won 14 new enterprise logos in FY2023, averaging 6-week sales cycles
- Promoted to Regional Lead after 18 months following top performance review
Education — What to Include at Each Career Stage
Early career (0–5 years): education section near the top, include degree class, relevant modules, dissertation title, and academic achievements. Mid-career (5+ years): education moves below experience. Include institution, qualification, and year — nothing more. Remove A-levels once you have a degree and professional experience. Professional qualifications (CPA, CFA, CIMA, PMP, AWS etc.) are high-value and should be prominently featured throughout your career.
Skills Section — Keywords That Open Doors
The skills section has two audiences: the ATS (which scans for keyword matches) and the human reader (who wants a quick skills snapshot). Include both hard skills (specific tools, languages, systems) and soft skills (but only where you can evidence them elsewhere in the CV). Mirror the language used in the job description — if they say "Salesforce" don't write "CRM software". Direct keyword matching improves ATS pass-through rates significantly.
💡 Include 10–15 skills maximum — too many dilutes the signalAdditional Sections Worth Including
Depending on your profile, consider adding: Publications & Research (academic and thought leadership), Certifications & Training (with dates — recent certifications signal current relevance), Volunteer Work (especially where it demonstrates leadership or skills relevant to the role), Languages (always valuable — specify proficiency level accurately), and Projects (personal projects, open source contributions, or significant work samples particularly valuable for technical and creative roles).
🤖 The Complete ATS Optimisation Guide
Applicant Tracking Systems filter CVs before a human ever reads them. Understanding how they work — and how to pass through them — is now as important as the content of your CV itself.
The ATS Reality: A CV that a recruiter would rate 9/10 for quality will fail an ATS if it uses tables for layout, embedded graphics, non-standard section headings, or the wrong file format. Formatting for ATS and formatting for human readers require a different approach — this section covers both.
✅ ATS-Friendly Practices
- Use standard section headings: "Work Experience", "Education", "Skills" — not creative alternatives
- Submit as .docx or .pdf (check the job posting — some ATS prefer .docx)
- Use standard fonts: Calibri, Arial, Times New Roman, Georgia (readable by all ATS)
- Spell out abbreviations first time: "Search Engine Optimisation (SEO)"
- Include keywords from the job description verbatim — don't paraphrase
- Use a single-column layout — ATS misread multi-column layouts
- Put contact details in the body of the document, not in headers/footers
- Include your job title clearly in your professional summary
⛔ ATS-Breaking Mistakes
- Using tables to create two-column layouts — ATS scramble the content
- Including text in images, charts, or graphics — ATS cannot read them
- Contact details in header/footer — invisible to many ATS parsers
- Using special characters (★ ◆ →) as bullet points — causes parsing errors
- Non-standard date formats — use consistent Month YYYY or MM/YYYY
- Creative section titles: "Where I've Been" instead of "Work Experience"
- Embedded hyperlinks containing important information — often stripped
- Inconsistent formatting — varying fonts, sizes, or spacing confuses parsers
✍️ CV Writing Tips That Recruiting Professionals Actually Use
These are the specifics that separate CVs that get shortlisted from those that don't — drawn from patterns across hundreds of thousands of applications processed on our platform.
- Tailor your CV for every application — a 20-minute tailoring session produces far better results than a generic CV
- Use the exact job title from the posting in your professional summary — ATS and recruiters scan for it
- Quantify at least 60% of your achievement bullets — numbers are scannable and memorable
- Use active, past-tense verbs: Led, Built, Launched, Reduced, Grew, Managed — not "Responsible for"
- Keep sentences under 25 words — recruiters skim, they don't read linearly
- Consistent formatting throughout: same font, same bullet style, same date format
- Leave white space — a cramped CV signals poor communication skills
- Spell-check twice, then read backwards — your brain auto-corrects errors when reading forward
- Get one other person to review it — fresh eyes catch gaps you've become blind to
- Remove "References available on request" — it's assumed and wastes valuable space
- Explain employment gaps proactively with brief, positive framing — don't leave them unexplained
- Your most recent role gets the most space — older roles can be compressed to 2–3 bullets
- Remove jobs older than 15 years unless they're directly relevant to the specific role
- Include a LinkedIn URL only if your profile is complete and consistent with your CV
📬 Covering Letters — When They Matter and How to Write Them
Covering letters are not always required — but when they are, a poor one can override a strong CV, and a great one can compensate for a weaker CV. Here is when to invest in one and how to structure it.
📋 When to Write a Covering Letter
- The job posting explicitly requests one
- You are making a career change and need to explain transferable skills
- You have a gap in employment history that needs context
- You are applying to a small company where relationship matters
- You have a strong personal connection to the company's mission
- The role is senior enough that cultural fit is part of the assessment
✍️ The 4-Paragraph Covering Letter Structure
- Para 1 — The Hook: Why this role, at this company, right now. Be specific.
- Para 2 — Your Strongest Evidence: Your single most relevant achievement for this specific role.
- Para 3 — The Fit: Why your experience specifically matches their stated needs.
- Para 4 — The Close: Brief, confident close. Express enthusiasm. Invite next step.
🔄 Document Tools for Your Application
Managing different CV formats, converting between file types, and keeping your documents consistent across applications is part of the job search process. Our built-in tools handle these tasks directly from your account.
PDF ↔ DOC Converter
Convert your CV between PDF and Word format instantly — no third-party tools needed. Useful when employers specify a particular file format.
Convert Now →Resume Score™
Paste a job description and your CV. Get an instant relevance score with a breakdown of keyword matches, missing skills, and ATS compatibility.
Score My CV →Job Alerts
Once your CV is ready, set up job alerts so you're notified instantly when matching roles are posted. Apply fast and be in the first wave of applicants.
Set Alerts →Build Your Winning CV Today — Free
Create your free candidate account to access our CV Builder, Resume Score™, PDF Converter, Job Alerts, and Interview Practice tools — everything you need for a successful job search in one place.