Stop Letting Resume Mistakes Hold Your Social Work Career Back
Identify and correct the pitfalls that keep hiring managers from seeing your impact.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Hiring managers can’t gauge your effectiveness
- ATS keywords are absent, reducing match rate
- Recruiters skim quickly and move past generic statements
- Replace weak verbs with action‑oriented ones (e.g., "facilitated" → "coordinated" )
- Add quantifiable outcomes (e.g., "served 150+ clients")
- Incorporate industry keywords like "case management" and "trauma‑informed care"
Provided counseling to individuals and families in a community setting.
Coordinated trauma‑informed counseling for 120+ individuals and families, achieving a 92% client satisfaction rating.
- Doesn’t differentiate you from other candidates
- Fails to demonstrate the value you added
- ATS often scores achievements higher than responsibilities
- Reframe each duty as an achievement
- Show the outcome of your actions
- Use the STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result) framework for bullet points
Conducted intake interviews and documented client information.
Led intake interviews for 30+ new clients weekly, reducing onboarding time by 25% and improving documentation accuracy.
- Licensure is often a mandatory requirement
- Missing credentials cause automatic disqualification
- ATS filters out resumes lacking required certifications
- Create a dedicated "Licensure & Certifications" section
- List state license number, expiration date, and any specialty certifications (e.g., LCSW, CSW)
- Place the section near the top of the resume for visibility
Education: B.A. Social Work, University of XYZ
Licensure & Certifications: Licensed Clinical Social Worker (LCSW), State of CA, License #123456 (Expires 06/2027); Certified Trauma Specialist (CTS)
- ATS may misread dates or headings
- Hiring managers perceive lack of professionalism
- Important information can be missed due to visual clutter
- Standardize date format to MM/YYYY
- Use uniform bullet style and spacing
- Apply consistent heading hierarchy (e.g., all section titles in bold, same font size)
Professional Experience Jan 2020 – March 2022 Community Outreach Coordinator
Professional Experience Community Outreach Coordinator 01/2020 – 03/2022
- Include a concise professional summary with 3‑4 impact statements
- List core competencies using exact keywords from the job posting
- Show achievements with numbers or percentages
- Add a dedicated licensure & certifications section
- Use consistent MM/YYYY dates and bold section headings
- Save as PDF with a clear file name
- Convert generic duties into achievement‑focused bullets
- Add measurable outcomes and relevant keywords
- Standardize dates to MM/YYYY
- Create a Licensure & Certifications section