| name | career-development |
| description | Resume crafting, interview preparation, job search strategy, and professional growth planning. |
| tier | extended |
| applyTo | **/*resume*,**/*cv*,**/*interview*,**/*job*,**/*career*,**/*cover-letter*,**/*portfolio*,**/*linkedin* |
Career Development Skill
Resume crafting, interview preparation, job search strategy, and professional growth planning.
Core Principle
Career development is a repeatable skill, not luck. Strong candidates prepare systematically: they know their story, they practice delivery, and they treat the job search like a project.
Resume & CV
Resume Structure (1–2 pages)
| Section | Purpose | Tips |
|---|
| Header | Name, contact, LinkedIn, portfolio | No photo (US standard), clean formatting |
| Summary | 2–3 sentence professional identity | Lead with years of experience + domain + differentiator |
| Experience | Reverse chronological | Accomplishment bullets, not job descriptions |
| Skills | Technical and relevant soft skills | Match to job posting keywords |
| Education | Degrees, certifications | Omit graduation dates if >15 years ago (reduces bias) |
| Projects (optional) | Side projects, open source, publications | Strong for early-career or career changers |
Writing Accomplishment Bullets
Formula: Action verb + What you did + Measurable result
| Weak | Strong |
|---|
| "Responsible for managing team" | "Led 8-person engineering team delivering $2M platform migration on time" |
| "Helped with marketing" | "Increased email open rates 34% by A/B testing subject lines across 50K subscribers" |
| "Worked on customer issues" | "Resolved 95% of Tier 2 support tickets within SLA, reducing escalations by 40%" |
Action Verbs by Category
| Category | Verbs |
|---|
| Leadership | Led, Directed, Managed, Spearheaded, Founded, Championed |
| Achievement | Achieved, Delivered, Exceeded, Grew, Increased, Improved |
| Technical | Built, Engineered, Designed, Architected, Automated, Deployed |
| Analysis | Analyzed, Evaluated, Assessed, Identified, Researched, Audited |
| Communication | Presented, Published, Documented, Trained, Mentored, Negotiated |
| Creative | Created, Designed, Developed, Launched, Produced, Transformed |
ATS (Applicant Tracking System) Optimization
- Use standard section headings (Experience, Education, Skills — not jargon)
- Include exact keywords from the job posting
- Avoid tables, columns, headers/footers, text boxes (ATS can't parse them)
- Save as PDF unless specifically asked for .docx
- File name:
FirstName-LastName-Resume.pdf
Cover Letter
Structure (3–4 paragraphs, <1 page)
- Opening: Specific role + why this company + brief hook
- Body 1: Your strongest relevant accomplishment → their need
- Body 2: Second accomplishment or cultural/mission fit
- Close: Express enthusiasm, mention availability, thank them
Rules
- Address a specific person when possible (LinkedIn research)
- Never repeat the resume — expand on 1–2 highlights with context
- Mirror language from the job posting
- Show you researched the company (product, mission, recent news)
Interview Preparation
STAR Method (Behavioral Questions)
| Component | What to Include | Time |
|---|
| S — Situation | Context with enough detail for the interviewer to follow | 15–20% |
| T — Task | Your specific responsibility | 10–15% |
| A — Action | What YOU did (not the team) — specific steps | 50–60% |
| R — Result | Measurable outcome, what you learned | 15–20% |
Common Interview Types
| Type | Format | Preparation |
|---|
| Behavioral | "Tell me about a time..." | 8–10 STAR stories covering leadership, conflict, failure, collaboration |
| Technical | Coding, case study, whiteboard | Practice domain problems, think aloud |
| Case | Business scenario analysis | Structure → Hypothesis → Analysis → Recommendation |
| Panel | Multiple interviewers simultaneously | Address everyone, note names, make eye contact across the group |
| Culture fit | Values, working style, motivation | Research the company's stated values, prepare authentic examples |
Questions to Ask the Interviewer
| Category | Strong Question |
|---|
| Role | "What does a successful first 90 days look like?" |
| Team | "How does the team handle disagreements about technical direction?" |
| Growth | "What professional development does the company support?" |
| Manager | "What's your management style? How do you give feedback?" |
| Business | "What's the biggest challenge the team faces this year?" |
Questions to Avoid Asking Early
- Salary (wait until they bring it up or you have an offer)
- Vacation days (wait for offer stage)
- "What does the company do?" (shows zero research)
Job Search Strategy
Search Channels (by effectiveness)
| Channel | Hit Rate | Strategy |
|---|
| Referrals | Highest | Tell your network what you're looking for |
| Direct applications (company site) | Medium | Target 10–15 companies, apply early |
| LinkedIn | Medium | Optimize profile, engage with content, use "Open to Work" selectively |
| Recruiters | Variable | Build relationships before you need them |
| Job boards | Lower | Use for discovery, not as primary channel |
Application Tracking
Track every application with:
- Company, role, date applied, source
- Contact name and email
- Stage (Applied → Phone screen → Interview → Offer → Accepted/Rejected)
- Follow-up dates
- Notes from each interaction
{
"applications": [
{
"company": "Acme Corp",
"role": "Senior Engineer",
"applied": "2026-04-01",
"source": "referral",
"contact": "Jane Smith (jane@acme.com)",
"stage": "phone-screen",
"followUp": "2026-04-08",
"notes": "Strong culture fit, team uses similar stack"
}
]
}
Networking Without Being Awkward
- Give before you ask: Share an article, make an introduction, congratulate achievements
- Be specific: "I'd love to learn about your experience leading remote teams" (not "Can I pick your brain?")
- Follow up: Send a thank-you within 24 hours of any conversation
- Stay visible: Comment on industry posts, share your own insights
Salary Negotiation
Preparation
- Research market rates (Levels.fyi, Glassdoor, Payscale, industry surveys)
- Know your minimum acceptable number before the conversation
- Factor in total compensation (base, bonus, equity, benefits, flexibility)
Negotiation Framework
| Step | Script |
|---|
| 1 — Acknowledge | "Thank you for the offer — I'm excited about this role." |
| 2 — Ask time | "I'd like a few days to review the full package." |
| 3 — Counter | "Based on my research and experience, I was expecting [range]. Can we discuss?" |
| 4 — Justify | Cite market data, specific skills, competing offers |
| 5 — Listen | Let them respond. Silence is powerful. |
| 6 — Confirm | Get the final offer in writing before accepting |
What to Negotiate Beyond Salary
- Signing bonus
- Equity / stock options (ask about vesting schedule)
- Remote work flexibility
- Professional development budget
- Start date
- Title
- Review timeline (6-month instead of 12-month review)
Professional Growth Planning
Individual Development Plan (IDP)
| Component | Question | Time Horizon |
|---|
| Current strengths | What am I already good at? | — |
| Growth areas | What gaps do I need to close? | — |
| Short-term goals | What do I want to achieve in 6 months? | 6 months |
| Long-term goals | Where do I want to be in 3 years? | 3 years |
| Actions | What specific steps will I take? | Monthly |
| Support needed | Mentorship, training, stretch assignments? | Ongoing |
Career Transition Patterns
| From → To | Key Bridging Strategy |
|---|
| IC → Manager | Lead a project, mentor juniors, take a management course |
| Tech → Product | Build side project with product lens, get PM certification |
| Corporate → Startup | Build a side project, network in startup communities |
| Career change | Identify transferable skills, take bridge courses, volunteer in new field |
Anti-Patterns
- Sending identical resumes to every job (no tailoring)
- Applying to 100 jobs instead of targeting 15 with research
- Preparing STAR stories the night before the interview
- Accepting the first salary offer without negotiating
- Ghosting after receiving a rejection (the contact may help later)
- Listing responsibilities instead of accomplishments on a resume
- Ignoring LinkedIn as a professional brand