The Skills Section of Your Developer Resume Is Broken. Here Is How to Fix It
Most developer resumes have the same skills section. It is a long line of technologies separated by commas, listed in random order, with no context for any of them. Recruiters see hundreds of these...

Source: DEV Community
Most developer resumes have the same skills section. It is a long line of technologies separated by commas, listed in random order, with no context for any of them. Recruiters see hundreds of these. Yours looks identical to every other candidate. The skills section is not a formality. It is one of the first places hiring managers and ATS systems check. Getting it wrong costs you callbacks. Getting it right moves you to the top of the stack. Here is what works. The Problem With Skill Dumps A typical developer skills section looks like this: Python, JavaScript, React, Node.js, AWS, Docker, Kubernetes, SQL, MongoDB, Git, Agile, Scrum This format has three problems. First, it gives no signal about depth. Listing Docker is different from running production Kubernetes clusters. Listing React is different from building component libraries used by 50 engineers. A flat list treats all skills as equal. Second, it is not tailored. The same list goes on every application, whether the role is a bac