The Credit Analyst resume cheat sheet you must have by your side
Olivia Attwood
Certified Professional Resume Writer ● Career Coach ● Executive Resume Writer ● MBA, BEng, CPRW, CPCC
Imagine this: A crazy-good offer comes from your dream employer for an excellent Credit Analyst position. You get a glass office with a cool desk and too-good-to-be-true health benefits that include dental! But only if your resume makes the cut.
What would your chances be of winning the job with the current resume you have? If your answer was anything below 90%, your resume needs a revamp. Hiring managers get tons of job applications per position. Most of those applicants hire professional resume writers to create their resumes. If you want to give a worthy fight, your resume should be nothing less than perfect.
Here are some helpful tips for you to get chopping away at your “meh” resume and turn it into a “wow” resume!
Select the Credit Analyst resume format that suits your experience
Your resume might boast next-level accounting, tech, and finance skills, but if you don’t present them properly, a hiring manager wouldn’t probably even see it all. Presentation is everything when it comes to your resume. First of all, select the best resume format among chronological, functional, and hybrid to suit your level of expertise. Pro tip: Hiring managers are the most accustomed to scanning reverse-chronological resumes. Using this format will give you a better advantage.
Construct a compelling Credit Analyst resume summary
Did you know that the top one-third of your resume is the only part that is skimmed by a hiring manager during the 6-second resume test? Listing a strongly written resume summary statement at the top of your resume dramatically increases your chances of getting noticed by the recruiter. Create an elevator pitch for yourself that includes:
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Tailor your Credit Analyst resume to the job description
The resumes that stand out the most are those which deviate from the cookie-cutter patterns. But just adding random things to your resume to make it different from others won’t work. Find what you can do to make the ATS happy. Include all the right keywords and skills from the job description in your resume. The best place to find the right keywords is the job description. You can also align the language of your resume to fit in with the company lingo which will be displayed on the employer’s website. It’s also safe to include industrial jargon in your resume. But keep in mind that the person reading it first is an HR professional, not a technical professional. We’ve done an article on the best skills for your Credit Analyst resume before.
Elaborate on the education section of your Credit Analyst resume a little
Don’t simply mention the name of your degree and call it quits. There’s a lot more that goes into an impressive education section:
Create a powerful work experience section for your Credit Analyst resume
We saved the best part of your resume for the last! Your career summary is the most important section of your resume. Invest a lot of time in writing this section. Incorporate a good balance of adjectives, action verbs, skills, results, and numbers in your bullet points. 3 – 6 strongly written bullet points for each experience of your career summary will get you highlighted. Pro tip: Using percentages to quantify financial achievements make even smaller contributions seem larger!