First impressions online are fast. Recruiters skim for clarity, proof, and signs you can work well with a team. Messy files, buzzword soup, or sloppy profiles get quick passes. You do not need flashy design. You need clean facts, simple language, and results that match the role.
1. An “Objective” About What You Want

Leads with your needs instead of value. Swap in a two-line summary and three results. Make them match the job’s wording so the fit is obvious.
2. File That an ATS Can’t Read

Scanned PDFs, images, and funky columns break parsing. The guidance on applicant tracking systems at CareerOneStop explains why simple Word or text works best. Keep headings standard and bullets short.
3. Wall-of-Text Writing

Blocks of jargon look dated and hard to skim. Use short, active sentences and plain English. The U.S. Department of Labor’s Plain Language Quick Reference Guide shows how to write so busy people can read fast.
4. Duties, Not Results

“Responsible for” reads like a job ad. Lead with a number, a tool, and an outcome. Proof beats adjectives.
5. Skills That Don’t Match the Posting

Generic lists tell recruiters you did not read the role. Mirror the job’s core tools and add one proof line under each.
6. No Mention of Teamwork or Communication

Employers rate these as top hiring needs, which the NACE career-readiness competencies spell out. Add one bullet that shows how you worked across teams and closed loops.
7. Old Email Address and No LinkedIn

Hotmail plus no profile looks stale. Use a professional email and add a clean URL. Keep your headline specific to the role you want.
8. Unclear Location or Time Zone

Recruiters need to know when you can be online or onsite. Put city, state, and time zone up top. Remote roles still ask.
9. Confusing Job Titles

Creative labels hide what you actually did. Pair the internal title with a market-standard one in parentheses so searches hit.
10. Messy File Names

“Resume_Final_v7_REAL.pdf” looks chaotic. Save as Firstname_Lastname_Resume.pdf so hiring teams can find you.
11. Buzzword Soup

“Strategic ninja” says nothing. Replace fluff with a metric and a tool. Keep verbs strong and concrete.
12. Typos in the First Lines

Errors signal low care. Print your resume and read it aloud. One quiet proof beats a quick send.
13. Gaps With No Context

Silence invites assumptions. Add one honest line for caregiving, a layoff, or a course. Then show what you finished.
14. Salary Talk Up Front

Leading with pay in a cold outreach reads transactional. Ask your range questions after there is clear role fit.
15. No Portfolio or Examples

Claims are cheap. Link a one-pager with three short wins, a screenshot, and a result. Keep it simple.
16. Social Feeds That Undercut You

Public rants or careless posts cost interviews. Many employers review profiles, which is covered in SHRM’s guidance on social media screening. Audit your accounts and lock down what should be private.
17. Photos and Dates That Invite Bias

Headshots and graduation years add no value. Keep personal details out. Stick to skills and results.
18. No “Open to Work” Signal for Recruiters

Make it easy to find you without alerting your network. The privacy controls in LinkedIn’s Open to Work settings let recruiters see availability while your boss does not.
19. Vague Company Descriptions

If the employer is small, add one line on size and product. Context helps your results make sense.
20. Inconsistent Dates Across Resume and Profile

This is an easy one to get wrong. Especially if you’ve had more than a few jobs over the course of your career. Mismatches look like red flags even when they’re innocent errors. Align months and titles everywhere.
21. No Contact Preferences

If you never pick up unknown numbers, say “Text or email preferred.” Make reaching you painless.
22. Dead Links

A broken portfolio or 404 kills momentum. Test every link on a phone and a laptop before you send.
23. Slow Replies After a Nibble

Hiring moves quickly. Set two daily windows for messages and keep responses short. Speed signals interest.











