Veteran graphic designer with 11 years of experience in print design and digital media. Inventive creator of marketing campaigns and branding. Strong team player with good verbal and written communication skills and ability to establish and maintain positive collaborative and interpersonal relationships.
Yes. This resume puts in a lot of information but is easy to read. None of the bullet points run more than two lines. Most of the jobseeker’s bullets run only one line, and all begin with strong power verbs that are relevant to her profession, such as “created”, “developed”, “designed”, and “establish”. The applicant pays attention to formatting, making sure to have a separate “Skills” section in the resume so that recruiters can easily find it.
Sure. The jobseeker lists her graphic design degree, along with her strong academic performance that warranted receiving magna cum laude honors. Above that, she lists her work experience correctly in reverse chronological order and shows career mobility through promotions in job titles, roles, and responsibilities. Bullet points present the experience for easier reading over paragraphs, with present tense verbs used in the current position and past tense action verbs for past positions. The positions show a mix of duties and achievements. The applicant keeps to five to eight bullet points for each position held.
Certainly. Most notably in the current position, the candidate mentions in the graphic designer resume sample that she had completed client projects worth up to $900,000 and distributed monthly newsletters to 5,000 people. She also mentions having earned awards for providing graphic design support for the company.
Yes. In the summary, the candidate mentions being a strong team player who has good interpersonal and collaborative skills, along with verbal and oral communication abilities. She backs this up through references to working with other teams, clients, managers, and vendors. In the current position, the jobseeker also comments on her ability to work under tight deadlines.
Of course. In the resume sample, the applicant lists her skills right after the summary and then thoroughly portrays those skills and how she has used them throughout her work experience. She has provided evidence of having created print and digital work through web assets, brochures, cards, logos, images, posters, and other similar materials.