jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • Recruiters
  • Your Account

  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

career-advice.jobs.ac.uk

Secondary Sidebar

jobs.ac.uk Career Advice

  • CV and Cover Letter Advice
    • CV Tips
    • Free CV Templates
    • Cover Letters with Examples
    • Personal Profiles
    • CV Resources
  • Jobseeking and Interview Tips
    • Jobseeking Tips
    • Academic Interviews
    • Professional Interviews
    • Jobseeking and Interview Resources
  • Career Development
    • Academic Careers
    • Research Careers
    • Professional Careers
    • Working in Industry
    • Career Development Resources
    • Global Careers
    • Working From Home
  • Women in Higher Education
  • Resources
    • Academic Case Studies
    • Professional Case Studies
    • Interview questions tool
    • Job Profiles
      • Biological Science Jobs
      • Health and Medical Jobs
      • Engineering and Technology Jobs
      • Computer Science Jobs
      • Physical and Environmental Science Jobs
      • Professional Service Jobs
    • Vlogs
  • Webinars
  • Country Profiles
    • Africa
      • Egypt
      • Ghana
      • Kenya
      • Nigeria
      • South
    • Americas
      • Canada
      • United States of America
    • Asia
      • Bahrain
      • Brunei
      • China
      • Hong Kong
      • India
      • Japan
      • Kazakhstan
      • Malaysia
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Singapore
      • South Korea
      • Turkey
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Vietnam
      • Uzbekistan
    • Europe
      • Belgium
      • Denmark
      • Finland
      • France
      • Germany
      • Ireland
      • Italy
      • Netherlands
      • Norway
      • Russia
      • Spain
      • Sweden
      • Switzerland
      • United Kingdom
    • Oceania
      • Australia
      • New Zealand
  • Studentship Advice
    • PhD
    • Studentship Resources
    • Vlogs
  • Academic Spotlight Interviews
  • Menu
    • CV and Cover Letter Advice
      • CV Tips
      • Free CV Templates
      • Cover Letters with Examples
      • Personal Profiles
      • CV Resources
    • Jobseeking and Interview Tips
      • Jobseeking Tips
      • Academic Interviews
      • Professional Interviews
      • Jobseeking and Interview Resources
    • Career Development
      • Academic Careers
      • Research Careers
      • Professional Careers
      • Working in Industry
      • Career Development Resources
      • Global Careers
    • Women in Higher Education
    • Resources
      • Academic Case Studies
      • Professional Case Studies
      • Interview questions tool
      • Blog
      • Vlogs
    • Webinars
    • Country Profiles
      • Africa
        • Egypt Country Profile
        • Ghana Country Profile
        • Kenya Country Profile
        • Nigeria Country Profile
        • South Africa Country Profile
      • Americas
        • Canada Country Profile
        • United States of America Country Profile
      • Asia
        • Bahrain Country Profile
        • Brunei Country Profile
        • China Country Profile
        • Hong Kong Country Profile
        • India Country Profile
        • Japan Country Profile
        • Kazakhstan Country Profile
        • Malaysia Country Profile
        • Qatar Country Profile
        • Saudi Arabia Country Profile
        • Singapore Country Profile
        • South Korea Country Profile
        • Turkey Country Profile
        • United Arab Emirates Country Profile
      • Europe
        • Belgium Country Profile
        • Work in Denmark – Country Profile
        • Finland Country Profile
        • France Country Profile
        • Germany Country Profile
        • Ireland Country Profile
        • Italy Country Profile
        • Netherlands Country Profile
        • Norway Country Profile
        • Russia Country Profile
        • Spain Country Profile
        • Sweden Country Profile
        • Switzerland Country Profile
        • United Kingdom Country Profile
      • Oceania
        • Australia Country profile
        • New Zealand Country Profile
    • Studentship Advice
      • PhD
      • Studentship Resources
      • Vlogs

Is Your CV Too Long? 6 Effective Fixes

cv too long

Even if your CV is full of qualifications, important skills and enviable job experience, it’s important to keep it brief. CVs should stick to a maximum of two A4 pages (unless you are an academic job seeker), mainly because recruiters are busy and likely to skim-read.

A concise CV will always go down better with recruiters and hiring managers. You don’t need to sacrifice any essential information to communicate why you’re a great candidate in the most economical, efficient way. This is how to do it in six simple steps:

1. Keep sentences brief and punchy

Reading your CV should be easy for whoever’s looking at it. The best way to do this is to re-read everything you’ve written and simplify it. Sentences shouldn’t go on too long with multiple clauses and commas – short statements get your point across simply and in less space. You’ll make more impact, but with fewer words.

2. Choose an uncomplicated structure

The structure of your CV is just as important as its content. Big, dense paragraphs that fill every space make your CV look cluttered and hard to read. On the other hand, leaving large blank margins is a waste of space too.

Bullet points, bold headings and small spaces between paragraphs will make the most of every inch without overwhelming your reader’s eyes and brain. Black text on a white background is ideal as the contrast allows for easy reading, while it’s generally best to avoid any fancy designs or graphics. They look great, but they’re style over substance.

3. Make the most of the top quarter

Recruiters are skim-readers, so it’s a good idea to grab their attention as quickly as possible. The top quarter of your CV should include a brief profile that explains who you are and what you do, followed by a list of your top skills. This section needs to be the most persuasive and full of value.

Your employment history will cover the most space, then you can summarise your education and qualifications at the end.

4. Make sure everything is relevant

Whether you’re applying through a job advert or directly to an organisation, it’s important to tailor your CV to the specific role you’re applying for. Your previous job roles, relevant experience, skills and qualifications should focus on what the reader really wants to know, plus any helpful extras if you have room within your two pages.

5. Simplify each job role

Many people go into lots of detail about what they did in their previous roles, but they don’t pay enough attention to the difference they actually made. Your individual responsibilities do matter, but they shouldn’t take space away from your achievements and any targets you’ve exceeded. If it’s something only you can offer, it deserves a mention.

6. Be ruthless with older roles

A long and impressive employment history will fill up your CV quite quickly. It’s really easy to want to show off everything you can do, but too much is going to make the reader switch off.

You should go into more detail about your more recent roles because they’ll matter most to the employer. Older roles should be condensed into a few summary bullet points, so the employer knows the essentials. Depending on how many roles you have to mention, you could reduce everything from 5+ years ago.

A succinct CV with concise detail is much more valuable than writing as much as you can think of. You want the reader to remember you and what you can do, not be overwhelmed with information. The most experienced candidates have all the more reason to edit their CVs carefully – and it will pay off in interview invitations!

Andrew Fennell is the founder of CV writing advice website StandOut CV

For more CV tips see:

  • How To Write A Good CV
  • CV Advice Webinar
  • The Key To The Perfect CV
  • 10 things NOT to do on your CV

What did you think of our article? - please rate

4 / 5. 1


Share this article

Andrew Fennell

Andrew Fennell is a former recruitment consultant and contributes careers advice to websites like Business Insider, The Guardian and FastCompany.

Reader Interactions

You may also like:

Can skills outweigh qualifications?

10 MORE things not to do on your CV

CV Tips – 10 questions answered

Comments

  1. Afrikan Eagle says

    9th December 2019 at 7:26 am

    I do not think there is a one-size-fits-all CV style. I have been in academia since 1997 and I have risen through all the ranks to full Professorship. A detailed CV showing all that one has done as an academic mind will do more than some scanty resume. A scholar whose works have appeared in peer-reviewed journals must showcase those works with full references. The academic life is all about productivity. Not sure what obtains elsewhere.

    Reply
  2. KATUSHABE PHIONAH says

    8th December 2021 at 9:32 am

    Is it right to put a heading “Curriculum Vitae” on top of my CV.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

one × two =

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Primary Sidebar

Follow us

Elizabeth Berry

Latest Jobs

  • Innovation Communications Manager

    Robert Hooke Building, Parks Road, OX1 3PR, University of Oxford

    Location: Oxford

    Salary: £48,235 - £57,255 per annum


  • Senior Lecturer in Sports Therapy

    Sport & Physical Activity, Edge Hill University

    Location: Ormskirk

    Salary: £45,413 - £59,139 per annum


  • Lecturer (Accounting/Finance and Business Law)

    Academic Operations , University of Sunderland in London

    Location: Canary Wharf, London, South Quay

    Salary: £44,752 - £53,157 per annum


  • Project Manager

    Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Swansea University

    Location: Swansea

    Salary: £46,735 - £55,755 per annum


  • Research Fellow

    Health Economics Research Unit (HERU) / School of Medicine, Medical Sciences & Nutrition, University of Aberdeen

    Location: Aberdeen

    Salary: £38,249 - £45,413 Grade 6


  • Assistant Manager (Union House)

    Sports and Commercial Services - Catering Department, University of East Anglia

    Location: Norwich

    Salary: £24,344 - £25,733 25733 per annum.


Footer

jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people
  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Career Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility Statement

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2024

  • Find a Job
  • Find PhDs
  • Careers Advice
  • Jobs by Email
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Terms of use
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Accessibility
jobs.ac.uk - Great jobs for bright people

Copyright © jobs.ac.uk 1998 - 2022