Stop Resume Mistakes Holding Back Your Physical Therapy Career
Identify and correct the top errors that keep hiring managers from calling you back.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Doesn't show specialization
- Fails to capture recruiter interest
- Often filtered out by ATS keywords
- Replace objective with a concise professional summary
- Highlight years of experience and key PT specialties
- Include measurable outcomes
Objective: Seeking a position as a Physical Therapist.
Professional Summary: Licensed Physical Therapist with 5+ years delivering orthopedic and sports rehabilitation, improving patient mobility scores by 30%.
- Provides no proof of impact
- Makes resume look bland
- ATS prefers action verbs and metrics
- Start bullet points with strong verbs
- Quantify results (e.g., % improvement, number of patients)
- Focus on outcomes rather than tasks
• Performed patient assessments and created treatment plans.
• Conducted over 200 patient assessments, designing individualized treatment plans that reduced recovery time by 15%.
- Hiring managers need proof of eligibility
- Licensure is often a filter in ATS
- Missing certifications can signal lack of expertise
- Create a dedicated 'Licensure & Certifications' section
- List state license number, expiration, and relevant certifications (e.g., CPT, CSCS)
- Place this section near the top of the resume
Education: B.S. Kinesiology, XYZ University
Licensure & Certifications: • Licensed Physical Therapist, State of California, #123456 (expires 06/2026) • Certified Clinical Trainer (CCT), 2023
- Creates uncertainty about continuity
- ATS may misinterpret gaps
- Recruiters may assume lack of experience
- Use consistent month/year format (MM/YYYY)
- If gaps exist, include brief explanations or freelance work
- Align dates with each position clearly
Physical Therapist, ABC Hospital – 2018 to 2020
Physical Therapist, ABC Hospital – 06/2018 to 08/2020
- ATS may not map content correctly
- Recruiters skim for familiar headings
- Reduces readability
- Stick to conventional headings: Summary, Experience, Education, Licensure, Skills
- Avoid creative titles like 'My Journey' or 'What I Do'
- Use bold, title case for headings
What I Do
Professional Experience
- Use a professional summary instead of an objective
- Showcase achievements with numbers
- Include licensure number and expiration
- Standardize dates to MM/YYYY
- Use standard section headings
- Incorporate PT‑specific keywords (e.g., orthopedic, gait analysis)
- Keep resume to 1‑2 pages
- Save as PDF with searchable text
- Convert objective to summary
- Add quantifiable achievements
- Insert licensure section
- Standardize date format
- Replace non‑standard headings