Most People Get Resumes Wrong
Most people treat their resume like a fact sheet—a list of responsibilities, job titles, and tools. But that won’t land interviews. A resume is a sales document. Its purpose is to persuade the hiring manager that you are the solution to their business problems. Here’s how to make that shift.
The Resume-as-Sales-Page Mindset
Your resume needs to sell you, not just show facts.
Think of it this way: if your resume were a landing page, would anyone click “buy”?
That’s exactly what the hiring manager is doing when they choose to interview you they’re “buying” their time and attention for you out of 200+ other applicants.
The Mistake Most Resumes Make
Too many resumes read like this:
- Managed backlog
- Collaborated with cross-functional teams
- Conducted customer interviews
- Used Agile/Scrum
These aren’t differentiators, they’re table stakes.
They answer: “Did you do the job?”
But not the far more important: “Did you solve real problems?”
What Hiring Managers Actually Care About
Your target reader isn’t wondering if you’ve used Jira.
They’re wondering:
- Can you reduce churn?
- Can you increase retention?
- Can you help us ship faster?
- Can you keep the team aligned and motivated?
You won’t find those in the job description, but they’re what truly matter.
The Purpose of a Resume
Just like a sales page, your resume should:
- Speak to a real pain or problem
- Offer a clear value proposition
- Provide credible evidence of results
- Make the “buyer” (hiring manager) want to take the next step
And in this case, the next step is: “Let’s interview this person.”
Resume Bullet Examples: Facts vs. Sales
FACTUAL bullet:
Managed roadmap and stakeholder communication
SALES-DRIVEN bullet:
Defined and executed a new roadmap process that cut delivery delays by 30%, improved stakeholder trust, and accelerated feature adoption
The second bullet doesn’t just describe the work, it shows impact and promises value.
How to Rewrite Your Resume Now
When revising your resume, ask yourself:
- What business problem was I solving?
- What changed because I was there?
- Would a hiring manager want this result?
The best resumes don’t just check boxes. They make hiring managers say:
“I need someone like that.”
Want Help Writing a Resume That Sells?
I help product managers turn their resumes into persuasive, high-converting documents without fluff, filler, or outdated rules.
Book a free resume review and let’s make your resume sell you the way it should.