Turn Your Screenwriting Portfolio into a Winning Resume
Spot the 7 biggest resume mistakes screenwriters make and fix them in minutes.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Overwhelms hiring managers
- Dilutes impact of your strongest work
- ATS may flag excessive entries as noise
- Keep only produced, optioned, or selected scripts
- Limit the list to 5–7 key projects
- Use concise bullet points with title, year, and outcome
- My Scripts: Love in LA, Space Quest, Haunted House, Mystery Night, Comedy Gold, Drama Days, Thriller Edge, Romance Tales, Sci‑Fi Future, etc.
- Selected Credits: • "Orbit" (Sci‑Fi Pilot) – Selected for Sundance 2022, 12,000 reads • "Midnight Sun" (Feature) – Produced by Indie Studios, premiered at Tribeca 2021
- Non‑standard fonts aren’t readable by most ATS
- Embedded images can cause parsing errors
- Hiring managers may struggle to scan quickly
- Switch to Arial, Times New Roman, or Calibri (10–12 pt)
- Remove decorative graphics; use simple bullet points
- Ensure all text is selectable, not part of an image
<div style="font-family:'Papyrus';color:#ff6600;">My Resume</div>
John Doe – Screenwriter Arial 11 pt, black text, plain layout
- Provides no proof of impact
- Makes your work appear vague
- ATS often looks for quantifiable keywords
- Add numbers, awards, or audience metrics to each credit
- Use action verbs and specific results
- Highlight festival selections, view counts, or budget sizes
Wrote a sci‑fi pilot called "Orbit".
Wrote sci‑fi pilot "Orbit" – Selected for Sundance 2022, garnered 12,000 online reads and secured a development deal.
- Hiring managers may miss key information
- ATS may not map content to expected fields
- Reduces overall readability
- Use standard headings: "Professional Summary", "Selected Credits", "Professional Experience", "Awards & Festivals", "Education", "Skills"
- Keep heading hierarchy consistent (H2)
- Avoid creative titles like "My Work" or "Storytelling Journey"
My Work --- ...
Selected Credits --- ...
- Generic resumes get filtered by keyword‑based ATS
- Shows lack of research or enthusiasm
- Reduces chance of passing the first screening
- Analyze the job description for key phrases
- Insert those keywords into your summary and bullet points
- Reorder credits to match the desired genre or format
Professional Summary: Experienced screenwriter with a passion for storytelling.
Professional Summary: Award‑winning screenwriter specializing in drama series development. Proven track record in story structure, pilot scripting, and series bible creation for network TV.
- Use a clean, ATS‑friendly font
- Limit script list to 5–7 most relevant titles
- Include measurable outcomes for each credit
- Add a concise professional summary with target keywords
- Use standard section headings
- Save as PDF with searchable text
- Proofread for spelling and grammar
- Trim script list to top 5 credits
- Replace decorative fonts with Arial
- Add quantifiable results to each bullet
- Insert standard headings
- Optimize summary with job‑specific keywords