If your resume isn’t landing interviews, there’s likely a simple reason: it’s not doing its job for both the recruiter and the hiring manager. These two gatekeepers have very different priorities—and if you don’t account for both, your resume will get ignored. Here’s how to fix that.
Your Resume Has to Pass Two Gates
Every job application is reviewed by two key people:
- The HR recruiter
- The hiring manager
Each plays a different role in deciding whether you get called in.
Gate #1: The HR Recruiter
The recruiter is often the first person to see your resume. Their job is to screen, not select.
What they look for:
- Keywords that match the job description
- Action verbs and quantifiable results
- Basic qualifications: location, work eligibility, etc.
- Red flags like vague roles or career gaps
They are not an expert in the role itself. So they rely heavily on surface signals and structured checklists.
✅ To get past this gate, you need:
- A Skills section with job-matching terms
- Clear, recognizable job titles
- Some numbers that hint at results
Gate #2: The Hiring Manager
Now you’re in front of the person who actually understands the job—and who will work with you if hired.
They’re not looking for buzzwords. They’re asking:
“Did this person make a real impact in their last role?”
“Could they solve problems like the ones we have?”
They care about:
- Problem-solving ability
- Strategic thinking
- Impact over time
- Cultural and team fit
✅ To win this gate, you need:
- Resume bullets that tell micro-stories
- Each bullet should show:
- A problem or situation
- What you did
- What changed as a result
- A problem or situation
- No fluff, just clarity, action, and results
Which Gate Matters More?
The hiring manager.
They’re the one who says:
“I want to talk to this person.”
If your resume tells a strong story of impact, the hiring manager might request an interview even if the recruiter didn’t push your resume forward.
What to Do
To succeed, your resume has to serve two different readers:
| For Recruiters | For Hiring Managers |
| Use a Skills section | Write impactful bullets |
| Match keywords | Show how you solve problems |
| Use common job titles | Focus on results, not responsibilities |
| Avoid vague language | Skip buzzwords, keep it clear |
Think of it as writing a funnel:
✔ Keywords and basics get you through the scan.
✔ Strong stories get you into the room.
You’re not just writing a resume. You’re managing a funnel.
- First, you need to survive the scan: pass the recruiter’s basic criteria
- Then, you need to win the review: convince the hiring manager you’re a problem-solver
Understand those two roles. Write for both. That’s how you get interviews.
Want a Resume That Gets Through Both Gates?
I help product managers write resumes that satisfy recruiters and impress hiring managers—without outdated fluff or guesswork.
Let’s make your resume impossible to ignore.
