Write a Free Resume
With Top-Sales-Jobs.com
Top-Sales-Jobs.com offers visitors advice on how to write a free resume. Good advice. All at no cost.
Resume advice is abundant on the internet. What makes us so special? If you’re looking for a step by step
introduction to how to build a resume, you’ll find that here. If you’re looking for someone to actually
write a free resume for you, well…that’s another story.
I’m not aware of anyone providing resume writing services for free, on the internet, or anywhere else.
That being said, I think you’ll find our advice easy to follow. And at the end of the process, you’ll have a
resume that will open doors for you.
So, let’s get started. For more detailed information on any particular section, click on the links provided.
Resume Outlines: Your Roadmap
Before we officially start to write a free resume, we’re going to create an outline of a resume that will serve as a
roadmap for where we’re going. The outline is as follows:
- Summary Statement
- Professional Experience
Companies You Worked For (Name, Location, Dates)
Short description of what the company does
Titles Held for Each Company, with Dates
Short description of what your job entailed
Significant Accomplishments in each role
- Education
- Honors/Awards
- Professional Associations
Filling in the Details
Rule number 1: Write your Summary Statement last. You’ll find this much easier to write, once you’ve given
some thought to the positions you’ve held over the years, and you’re your accomplishments have been.
For each company you list, write a short sentence or two that tells the reader what the company does. This
is especially important if you’re not working for a big name company. Specifically include the industry the company
is in and the size of the company, in terms of revenue and employees.
List your positions. Your short description should not an excerpt from your job description! Instead, write
one or two sentences that describe your role. Like this:
Senior Sales Director
2006 - Present
Responsible for a 12 person sales team in the Midwest Region, with an annual sales quota of $72 million in new business.
Your Accomplishments
This is the hardest part. Listing your significant accomplishments. Your accomplishments are not your job
description. Accomplishments are results you’ve produced in your role. Things like:
Revamped the sales reporting system to accurately account for repeat business from existing customers, allowing the
company to more accurately forecast sales results.
Negotiated an $18 million, multi-year contract with a leading widget maker, the largest single deal in the
company’s history.
In thinking about your Accomplishments, cast a wide net. Let your ideas flow. Think about strong Action Verbs to
use at the beginning of each accomplishment statement. You’ll refine this list as you’re putting your resume together.
Education, Honors, and Professional Associations should be straight forward. Include only current Association
memberships, unless you held an officer position in the past 5 years. Continuing Education should be listed only
if significant. For example, attending a one hour workshop on handling objections should not be listed.
Now that you have some details mapped out, how do you put them together?
Chronological or Functional…
Which Resume Format is Right for You?
Your first decision is what resume format you will use. Top-Sales-Jobs.com recommends a chronological
format in almost all cases, so that’s what we’ll focus on here as we write a free resume. The outline you created above is already in the
right order. List your most recent positions first, working back through time to your earlier roles.
Resume Layout
Your resume layout needs to draw the screener in. Think readability. Think white space. Think visual interest.
Vary your font size. Vary your special effects, like bold, italics and underlining. Use some dividers to
visually break up information presented.
Start with your contact information at the top. Your name and phone number should also appear on Page 2.
Use Bold for your headings.
Your resume should be no more than 2 pages. If you have more to say, review your accomplishments and pare
them down. Include only your most significant results. If you have a lot of work experience, you can eliminate
accomplishments in your earlier roles.
Summary Statement
Your Summary Statement should be 3-5 sentences that highlight your key attributes. Think big picture. Like this:
Senior sales executive with a demonstrated track record of closing multi-year, multi-million dollar deals with Fortune
1000 companies, leading to President’s Club status in 8 of the past 10 years. Recognized as a strong leader, with
outstanding people management skills. Strong business acumen, including P & L management responsibility for the
North American sales operation.
Here’s what the finished document should look like:
Sample Resume
While we didn’t exactly write a free resume for you, you got some great advice from an expert in the field – at
no cost to you.
If you want Top-Sales-Jobs.com to critique the
resume you build, we’re happy to help.
For information on how to
order, click here.
For more information on how to write a free resume, visit these other sections. When you’re through browsing
our site, you’ll be an expert in your own right. Guaranteed!