Stop Security Analyst Resume Mistakes From Blocking Your Next Job
Identify and correct the most common errors that keep hiring managers and ATS from seeing your expertise.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Hiring managers may not recognize your role
- ATS keyword matching fails without exact titles
- Reduces perceived relevance to security positions
- Replace generic titles with industry‑standard ones (e.g., Security Analyst, Information Security Analyst)
- Add a subtitle that includes key focus areas (e.g., Threat Monitoring)
- Align the title with the job posting you’re targeting
IT Specialist
Security Analyst – Threat Monitoring
- Fails to demonstrate value or results
- ATS looks for quantifiable metrics and action verbs
- Recruiters skim bullets and drop vague statements
- Start each bullet with a strong action verb (Implemented, Reduced, Led)
- Quantify results (e.g., reduced incident response time by 30%)
- Mention specific tools and frameworks (SIEM, NIST, MITRE ATT&CK)
Responsible for security tasks and monitoring.
Implemented SIEM monitoring across 200 endpoints, reducing incident response time by 30% and detecting 15% more threats.
- Misses high‑value keywords that ATS prioritize
- Hiring managers may question your expertise level
- Certifications often act as a quick filter
- Create a dedicated Certifications section
- List industry‑recognized credentials (CISSP, CEH, CompTIA Security+)
- Include the year obtained if recent
(none)
Certifications: CISSP (2023), CompTIA Security+ (2021), Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH) (2022)
- ATS may misinterpret employment dates
- Hiring managers can’t quickly assess tenure
- Inconsistent dates look unprofessional
- Adopt a uniform MM/YYYY format for all dates
- Use the same separator (e.g., –) between start and end dates
- Avoid month names or textual ranges
Jan 2020 – Present
01/2020 – Present
- Many ATS strip out visual elements, losing content
- Important information may be omitted during parsing
- Recruiters using plain‑text views see a broken layout
- Replace tables with simple bullet lists
- Remove images and icons
- Use standard headings and plain text sections
<table><tr><td>Skill</td><td>Level</td></tr><tr><td>SIEM</td><td>Expert</td></tr></table>
• SIEM – Expert • Incident Response – Advanced • Vulnerability Management – Proficient
- Use a clear, keyword‑rich job title
- Add a concise professional summary with 3‑4 core strengths
- List achievements with numbers and tools
- Include up‑to‑date certifications and clear dates
- Format dates as MM/YYYY
- Avoid tables, graphics, or images
- Save as PDF for final submission
- Standardize headings
- Add quantifiable achievements
- Insert relevant certifications
- Convert dates to MM/YYYY
- Remove tables/graphics