Stop Losing Jobs Over Your Resume
The ultimate guide for ophthalmologists to eliminate resume mistakes and impress hiring managers.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Hiring managers may doubt your qualifications
- ATS may not match certification keywords
- Create a dedicated 'Certifications' section
- List board certification with year and certifying body
Board Certified: Yes
Board Certification: American Board of Ophthalmology, Certified 2018
- Non‑clinical recruiters may not understand
- ATS may not parse uncommon abbreviations
- Translate acronyms, explain procedures briefly
- Balance technical detail with lay terms
Performed PPV, ILM peel, and DME management.
Performed pars plana vitrectomy (PPV), internal limiting membrane (ILM) peel, and managed diabetic macular edema (DME).
- Gaps raise concerns
- ATS may misinterpret timeline
- Use consistent month/year format
- Include month for each role
2019 – Present
June 2019 – Present
- Academic positions value publications
- ATS keywords like 'peer‑reviewed' are missed
- Add a 'Research & Publications' section
- List top 3 papers with citation style
Research: Conducted studies on glaucoma.
Research & Publications: 1. Smith J, Doe A. 'Novel Imaging in Glaucoma', Ophthalmology, 2022. 2. ...
- Medical hiring prefers chronological
- ATS may skip functional sections
- Switch to reverse‑chronological format
- Highlight recent roles first
Skills: Retinal surgery, patient counseling, ...
Professional Experience (most recent first)
- Include board certification with year
- Spell out all acronyms on first use
- Use month/year for all dates
- Add a research/publications section
- Format resume in reverse‑chronological order
- Save as PDF with searchable text
- Tailor keywords to the job description
- Add missing board certification details
- Expand acronyms
- Standardize dates
- Insert research publications section
- Convert functional layout to chronological