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How to Write a Professional Summary That Gets Noticed

The professional summary is the most important 3 lines on your resume. Here is a proven formula to write one that makes recruiters read on.

The professional summary sits at the top of your resume and is often the only section a recruiter reads before deciding whether to continue. A weak summary — or worse, no summary — wastes your most valuable real estate. An objective statement ("Seeking a challenging role where I can apply my skills") is even worse: it tells the recruiter what you want, not what you offer.

A strong professional summary follows this formula: [Job title] with [X years] of experience in [industry/specialisation]. [2 key achievements or capabilities]. [What you bring to the target role]. For example: "Digital Marketing Manager with 7 years of experience in B2B SaaS. Drove 3x organic traffic growth at TechCo and managed $2M in annual ad spend. Passionate about data-driven campaigns that convert." Three sentences. Specific. Metrics included. Targeted to marketing roles.

Common mistakes to avoid: writing in first person ("I am a dedicated..."), being too vague ("results-oriented professional"), listing soft skills instead of hard achievements, and making it too long (3–4 lines maximum). Your summary should be the last thing you write — only after you've finalised the rest of the resume, because you'll know exactly what your strongest points are.

AI-checker generates a targeted professional summary from your raw experience, calibrated to your industry and the specific role you're applying for.

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