Guides5 min read

How to Write a Resume That Beats AI and Impresses Humans

Justin Bartak

Justin Bartak

Founder & Chief AI Architect, Orbit

Building AI-native platforms for $383M+ in enterprise value

Your resume has two readers. They want completely different things.

The first reader is an algorithm. An ATS that parses your document, extracts keywords, and scores you against the job description. The second is a human. A recruiter or hiring manager who will spend an average of 7.4 seconds on their initial scan.

The algorithm wants exact keyword matches, clean formatting, structured data. The human wants a compelling narrative, evidence of impact, a sense of who you are. Writing for one at the expense of the other guarantees failure.

A keyword-stuffed resume passes ATS but reads like a word cloud. A beautifully designed resume impresses humans but gets killed by the parser. You need both. And it's absolutely achievable with the right approach.

Structure that satisfies both

1. Professional summary (3 to 4 lines)

A concise opening: title, years of experience, key specializations, one headline achievement. Gives the ATS a dense keyword cluster. Gives the human an immediate picture.

"Senior Software Engineer with 8 years in full-stack development, specializing in React, Node.js, and cloud infrastructure. Led the migration of a monolithic platform to microservices, reducing deployment time by 70% and infrastructure costs by 35%."

Two sentences. Both audiences served. Move on.

2. Skills section (keyword zone)

Right after the summary. This is the ATS's matching reservoir. Technical skills by name (Python, AWS, Figma, Salesforce). Methodologies (Agile, Scrum, Lean). Soft skills using the job description's language. Both acronyms and full terms.

Organize into logical groups for human readability: Languages, Frameworks, Tools, Methodologies.

3. Experience section (impact-driven)

For each role: company, title, dates. 2 to 4 bullet points. Each starts with a strong action verb. Quantified results wherever possible.

The formula: Action verb + what you did + measurable result + context.

Weak: "Responsible for managing the marketing team's social media presence."

Strong: "Grew social media engagement by 145% over 6 months by implementing a data-driven content calendar and A/B testing post formats across 4 platforms."

The strong version gives the ATS keywords (social media, content calendar, A/B testing) and gives the human a specific, impressive achievement. Both audiences. One bullet.

4. Education and certifications

Degrees, relevant certs. Include institution and year (or omit year if age bias concerns you).

Formatting rules (non-negotiable)

  • Single column. Multi-column breaks most parsers.
  • Standard fonts. Arial, Calibri, Garamond, Times New Roman.
  • No graphics or icons. ATS can't read images.
  • No text boxes or tables. Content in these is often skipped entirely.
  • PDF or DOCX. Check the application instructions.
  • Standard section headers. "Experience" not "My Journey." "Education" not "Academic Background."
  • Consistent dates. Pick a format and stick with it.

The ATS pass

After writing for human readability, do an ATS optimization pass:

  1. Print the job description and resume side by side
  2. Highlight every keyword and phrase in the JD
  3. Check each one against your resume
  4. Add missing terms naturally in skills or experience bullets
  5. Include acronym and spelled-out versions

Target 70%+ match rate. Below that, you probably won't surface in a recruiter's search.

Orbit automates this entire process. Paste the job description and your base resume. The AI identifies keyword gaps, suggests optimized phrasing, and scores your match rate. It handles the technical optimization so you can focus on the narrative.

The human pass

After ATS optimization, review for human impact:

  • Does the first bullet of each job describe your biggest achievement? Recruiters scan top-to-bottom and often read only the first bullet per role.
  • Are numbers specific? "23%" is more credible than "significantly."
  • Is there a narrative arc? Growing responsibilities. Increasing impact. Clear direction.
  • Would a stranger understand your impact? Kill company jargon that only insiders recognize.

One page or two?

Up to 10 years of experience: one page. Beyond that: two pages. Never more. The test: if removing a bullet wouldn't change a hiring manager's decision, remove it.

The bottom line

Your resume is a marketing document that has to convert two very different audiences in sequence. Satisfy the algorithm first. Then make the human care. Get both right, and you stop being a name in a pile and start being a person in an interview room.

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