How to Write a Professional CV — CV Writing Tips for Job Seekers in the UK | Hire Resolve
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Your CV Is Your
Marketing Brochure.

Knowing how to write a professional CV is one of the most valuable career skills a job seeker can have. Your curriculum vitae is the first thing a hiring manager sees — this CV writing guide will show you exactly how to write a professional CV that makes recruiters stop, read, and call you for an interview.

Max 2–3 Pages
8 Essential Sections
One Shot to Impress

Your CV must sell you — fast. A hiring manager uses your CV to screen and shortlist candidates for interview. Recruiters scan job applications — they don't read them word for word. Every section, every line, every word must earn its place. A professionally written and well-organised CV will always outperform a generic template. Use templates only as a starting point. Need help finding the right role? Browse our current job listings or speak to a recruiter today.

How to Write a Professional CV: The 8 Essential Sections

A strong CV structure is the foundation of every successful job application. Build yours around these essential sections — in the right order.

01
Personal Details

Include your name, town/city (not full address), email, phone number, and mobile number. Optionally add driving licence and languages. Avoid including date of birth, marital status, or a photograph to prevent unconscious bias.

02
Personal Profile / Career Objective

A short, powerful statement that tells employers who you are as a job seeker, what you're looking for and what drives you. If written poorly it can damage your chances — include it only if it adds real value.

03
Qualifications

List all academic and vocational qualifications. Order by date or relevance. Include the qualification name, institution, date obtained and awards. Add professional licences, accreditations and association memberships.

04
Work Experience

Your employment history is the heart of your CV. List in reverse chronological order — most recent first. Include internships, voluntary work and part-time roles. Show your job title, start and end dates, duration, duties and the organisation's name. Leave no time gaps unexplained.

05
Skills Summary

Use keywords — not lengthy descriptions. Essential for technical fields like IT. List software packages with proficiency levels and any research or specialist skills not covered elsewhere in your CV.

06
Achievements

Consider a dedicated section highlighting standout wins at work and beyond. Concrete achievements set you apart from candidates with identical experience and qualifications.

07
Interests & Activities

Keep this brief. Include activities that positively shape a recruiter's perception of you. Avoid anything related to politics, religion or controversial topics that could alienate the reader.

08
References

Always ask permission before listing someone as a reference. If you're not ready to share names, the statement "References available upon request" is perfectly acceptable.

How to Write a Professional CV — CV Tips Every Job Seeker in the UK Needs

Follow every one of these CV writing tips before you send a single job application. Master these and you will know exactly how to write a professional CV that opens doors.

  1. 1 Keep it to two or three pages maximum. A professional CV format is clean, concise and balanced — if content doesn't add value, cut it.
  2. 2 Put your strongest content first. More work experience than qualifications? Lead with experience. Prioritise what makes you most hireable.
  3. 3 Account for every gap. No time gaps should exist in your CV — and if they do, be ready to explain them clearly in your interview.
  4. 4 Use industry keywords. Integrate relevant terms from your profession naturally — without losing clarity or authenticity.
  5. 5 Be concise and straight to the point. Avoid long paragraphs. Use lists. No slang, no abbreviations without explanation, no CAPS.
  6. 6 Keep it professional and black and white. No decorative borders, coloured text or elaborate formatting. Let your content do the selling.
  7. 7 Make it readable for everyone. If applying for a technical role, ensure a non-technical person can still follow and understand your CV.
  8. 8 Zero spelling or grammar errors. A single mistake can cost you the interview. Proofread thoroughly — then have someone else proofread it too.
  9. 9 Clearly label every section. Recruiters scan — make it effortless for them to find what they're looking for. Logical order is non-negotiable.
  10. 10 Tailor it to each job application. Highlight the experience most relevant to the specific role. Generic CVs get generic results — and always consider whether a cover letter should accompany your CV.
  11. 11 Get independent feedback. Have a qualified, objective person review your CV and tell you honestly how well it reads — and how well it sells you.
Pro Tip

The biggest CV mistake job seekers make is including things they cannot explain. If you get the interview, you must speak confidently to every single line of your CV. Never include anything you cannot expand on or defend under questioning — this is one of the most common CV mistakes to avoid in the UK and globally. Once your CV is ready, pair it with a strong cover letter for the best results. For additional guidance, the National Careers Service and LinkedIn's CV tips are excellent free resources.