Turn Your Cartographer Resume Into a Hiring Magnet
Identify and correct the most common pitfalls that keep you off the map of top candidates.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Recruiters can’t gauge your technical depth
- ATS keywords miss critical tools like ArcGIS or QGIS
- Hiring managers assume generic mapping experience
- List each GIS platform you master (e.g., ArcGIS Pro, QGIS, MapInfo)
- Pair software with proficiency level (Advanced, Intermediate)
- Include years of hands‑on use
Skilled in mapping and spatial analysis software
ArcGIS Pro (Advanced, 5 years), QGIS (Intermediate, 3 years), MapInfo (Advanced, 4 years)
- Dilutes focus on cartography expertise
- ATS may flag irrelevant keywords
- Recruiters waste time parsing unrelated experience
- Only keep duties that involve spatial data, map creation, or geospatial analysis
- If you must list unrelated work, frame it with transferable skills (e.g., data validation)
Cashier – Handled transactions, managed inventory, and assisted customers.
Retail Associate – Managed inventory data integrity, performed daily sales reporting, and trained staff on POS analytics (transferable data‑management skills).
- Key technical competencies are invisible to recruiters
- ATS keyword searches for “scale”, “projection”, “datum” will miss you
- Project managers may doubt your precision handling
- Create a dedicated bullet for each map product you produced, noting scale (e.g., 1:24,000), projection (e.g., NAD83), and datum
Produced topographic maps for regional planning.
Designed 1:24,000 topographic maps using NAD83 datum and UTM Zone 15N projection for regional planning projects.
- ATS cannot read images, causing loss of critical content
- Large graphics increase file size and may be rejected
- Recruiters may view the resume as unprofessional
- Stick to clean, text‑only formatting; use simple bullet points
- If you need a visual portfolio, link to an online map gallery instead
[Embedded map thumbnail] Created interactive web‑maps for tourism.
Created interactive web‑maps for tourism (see portfolio: www.mycartography.com/portfolio)
- Use a professional email address
- Include a headline with "Cartographer" and key GIS tools
- Quantify map projects (e.g., number of maps, area covered)
- List software, scale, projection, and datum for each map
- Keep fonts to 10‑12 pt and margins at 0.5‑1 in
- Save as PDF with searchable text
- Standardize GIS software names
- Add map scale, projection, and datum details
- Convert generic duties into action‑oriented statements
- Insert ATS‑friendly keywords
- Replace graphics with portfolio links