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2 posts tagged with "developer-resume"

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Design vs. Content: What Matters Most in a Tech Resume

· 11 min read
Design vs. Content: What Matters Most in a Tech Resume

The debate over resume design versus content often devolves into false binaries: either you need a visually stunning resume to stand out, or design is completely irrelevant and only content matters. Both extremes miss the point. The real question isn't whether design matters - it's what kind of design serves your content, and when design choices actively work against you.

For tech professionals, this distinction is critical. Your resume needs to communicate technical depth, project complexity, and problem-solving ability. Design can either facilitate that communication or obstruct it. Understanding where design helps, where it hurts, and how to apply structural principles that enhance readability will determine whether your resume works for you or against you.

Showcasing Your GitHub: How to Highlight Projects on Your Resume

· 11 min read
Showcasing Your GitHub: How to Highlight Projects on Your Resume

You've spent months building side projects, contributing to open-source, and polishing your GitHub profile. Your repositories demonstrate real skills - architectural decisions, code quality, problem-solving under constraints. Yet when it comes to your resume, most developers reduce this work to a single line: "GitHub: github.com/username." That's the equivalent of listing "Has code" as a skill. It tells hiring managers almost nothing.

The gap between having impressive projects and effectively communicating their value is where strong candidates become invisible. A GitHub link alone doesn't convey impact, complexity, or the depth of your technical judgment. Hiring managers won't dig through your repositories to figure out what you've built. You need to do that work for them - on your resume, in a format they can quickly evaluate.