CV examples by role

Role-specific CV examples with real professional summaries, quantified experience bullets, skills lists and the ATS keywords recruiters screen for. Pick your role, steal the structure, then build your own with the AI CV maker.

Software Engineer CV example

Software engineering CVs fail for a predictable reason: they list technologies instead of outcomes. A recruiter spends under ten seconds on the first pass, and a wall of framework names tells them nothing about whether you shipped, scaled, or fixed anything that mattered.

Read the guide

Frontend Developer CV example

Frontend roles attract enormous applicant volume, so your CV has to clear two filters: an ATS scanning for framework keywords, and a hiring manager scanning for proof you've built real interfaces used by real people.

Read the guide

Data Analyst CV example

Data analyst CVs commonly read like tool inventories — SQL, Excel, Tableau, Python — but every applicant lists the same tools. What hiring managers actually screen for is whether your analysis changed a decision: a price adjusted, a campaign killed, a process redesigned.

Read the guide

Marketing Manager CV example

Marketing is a metrics discipline, and a marketing CV without numbers reads as a junior CV regardless of your title. Budget owned, pipeline generated, CAC reduced, ROAS achieved — these are the figures a hiring manager scans for before reading a single sentence.

Read the guide

Registered Nurse CV example

Nursing CVs are screened first for hard credentials — license, certifications, unit experience, patient ratios — and only then for narrative. Make those facts impossible to miss: spell out your license type and state, list certifications with their acronyms (BLS, ACLS, PALS), and name the units you've worked.

Read the guide

Project Manager CV example

Project management CVs sink when they describe process instead of delivery. "Ran standups and maintained the backlog" describes every PM alive; "delivered a $2M ERP migration two weeks early" describes you. Lead with what you shipped, at what size, against what constraints.

Read the guide