Polish Your Police Officer Resume
Identify and correct the most common mistakes that keep you off the shortlist.
Common Mistakes That Kill Your Chances
Each mistake includes why it hurts, how to fix it, and before/after examples
- Hiring managers can’t see the impact of your work
- ATS may miss key law‑enforcement keywords
- Leaves you indistinguishable from other candidates
- Start each bullet with a strong action verb
- Add specific metrics (e.g., arrests, cases solved)
- Use police‑specific terminology
Responsible for patrol duties and responded to calls.
Patrolled a high‑crime precinct, responding to 120+ emergency calls/month and reducing response time by 15% through optimized routing.
- Takes up valuable space that could showcase relevant skills
- Distracts recruiters from core qualifications
- May signal lack of professionalism
- Remove hobbies unless directly tied to policing (e.g., community volunteer work)
- Replace with a brief "Community Involvement" section if relevant
Interests: Hiking, cooking, video games.
Community Involvement: Volunteer youth mentor for local after‑school program, fostering positive police‑community relations.
- Missing critical qualifications that many departments require
- ATS filters often search for specific certifications
- Reduces perceived readiness for specialized roles
- Create a dedicated "Certifications & Training" section
- List academy graduation date, specialized courses (e.g., Crisis Intervention, SWAT), and any state‑issued certifications
Education: Bachelor of Arts in Criminal Justice.
Certifications & Training: Police Academy Graduate – Class of 2020; Crisis Intervention Training (CIT) – 2022; Certified Firearms Instructor – 2023.
- Makes a poor first impression
- Hiring managers may doubt credibility
- ATS may reject malformed email addresses
- Use a professional email (first.last@email.com)
- Include phone number with area code
- Optionally add LinkedIn URL with a police‑focused profile
Email: coolguy123@yahoo.com
Email: alex.jordan@email.com | Phone: (555) 123‑4567 | LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/alexjordan‑lawenforcement
- ATS may fail to read employment dates
- Inconsistent formatting looks unprofessional
- Hiring managers struggle to follow career timeline
- Standardize dates to MM/YYYY
- List city and state only (e.g., "Los Angeles, CA")
- Align dates to the right for easy scanning
June 2018 – Present – Los Angeles, California
06/2018 – Present Los Angeles, CA
- Use a professional email address
- Include badge number if appropriate
- Add quantifiable achievements for each role
- Incorporate relevant keywords such as "community policing" and "investigation"
- Proofread for spelling and grammar
- Save as PDF with proper file name
- Convert bullet points to start with action verbs
- Add metrics to each duty
- Replace civilian jargon with law‑enforcement terminology
- Standardize date and location format