I polled over 200 recruiters on how to best showcase soft skills on your resume. Here's what they said.

All hands in from the team
Photo by Perry Grone

How important is it to have soft skills on your resume?

Very.

In 🙏 Top Soft Skills Recruiters Desperately Want You To Have, I presented the case with numbers and expert quotes and gave a long list of examples to inspire you for your next resume update.


How many soft skills are mentioned in your latest resume?



What I didn't say is exactly how to mention the soft skills, and one angry commenter took me to task for it:

who cares if a resume matches a list of “soft skills?”

Seriously, an employer can list 5, 10, 15, or all 140 of these skills in a job ad, and there will be hundreds (thousands?) of applicants who will simply paste them into their resume and send it in … irregardless of whether or not they actually have the skills. Employers looking for purple squirrels, applicants gaming the system, both sides shirking their duty and due diligence, each hoping to fake out the other.

Seriously? I mean really, seriously?

(I love getting comments like this, even if I don't always aim to rile people up. Well, not always 😉 )

The commenter understood that I recommended putting a list of short skills directly in your resume. I responded to the commenter, and then decided to take it further:

Maybe the recruiters reading your resume DO want such a list?

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I asked recruiters about soft skills on your resume

I reached out to over 200 recruiters with a Twitter poll. Not everyone responded but the results are still fascinating:

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Here are some of the recruiters' reactions to the poll:

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What this poll tells you

While the results are close and aren't statistically significant, and regardless of how recruiters voted or reacted, there's still an important takeaway, the implied one:

You must showcase your relevant soft skills on your resume, whether you list them explicitly or list top achievements that demonstrate those soft skills.

My recommendation for you

The poll and its responses show that unsurprisingly, different recruiters see things differently, and sometimes it may be industry-related.

Tailoring your resume well requires first doing company research, and if your resume is going to be sent to one of the recruiters here above, you now know how to tailor it for them, at least with respect to soft skills.

Otherwise, the most powerful yet simplest way to show someone you're listening is by repeating their own words back to them.

If a job listing requires certain soft skills and you have stories and achievements to prove you have them, include those soft skills in your resume like any other requested qualifications.

Include them word for word as much as it makes sense, especially if the recruiter may be using an ATS to scan candidate resumes for keywords.

This doesn't mean, unlike what the angry commenter understood, that you should group them into a “Soft Skills” section of your resume, which is why it's not one of my recommended 📝 111 Helpful Resume Section Headings and Titles and never has been.

That's “not a good use of space on a resume,” as Rebecca Warren tweeted.

Instead, “address your proficiency” with the required soft skills, as Kristina Marlow tweeted, by highlighting them with “a listing of accomplishments that obviously would require the use of said skills,” as Michael G. Cox tweeted.

For example, if the job opening requires someone with “Good communication skills, ability to mentor and work collaboratively,” perhaps you “Coached a team of 10 salespeople to a 41% increase in annual sales, including absorbing and mentoring 3 new hires.”

Question of the article

How are soft skills currently included in your resume, and are you planning to change? Tell us in the comments.

What others are saying

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Jacob Share

Job Search Expert, Professional Blogger, Creative Thinker, Community Builder with a sense of humor. I like to help people.

This Post Has 7 Comments

  1. daniel

    This is what am talking about awesome article

  2. Thea Kelley

    Mentioning soft skills isn’t much use; everybody thinks they’re an excellent communicator, good with people, etc. What really works is to **demonstrate** soft skills–e.g., demonstrate leadership skills by mentioning team accomplishments, demonstrate people skills by quoting from LinkedIn recommendations or other 3rd-party kudos, and demonstrate communication skills by having a really well-written resume.

    1. Jacob Share

      Those are helpful examples, Thea. Thanks for the comment.

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