The bullet formula that works
Every strong resume bullet follows this structure:
[Strong verb] + [what you did] + [quantified outcome]
Examples:
- Led a 6-person team to launch a B2B SaaS product, growing ARR from $0 to $2.4M in 18 months.
- Reduced p99 API latency by migrating 14 services to Spot instances, cutting infra costs 42% ($380k/year).
- Closed 23 enterprise deals via outbound prospecting, contributing $4.8M of $11M team quota.
Compare those to bullets that score badly:
- "Responsible for various marketing initiatives" - no verb, no outcome, vague scope.
- "Helped the team improve their processes" - weak verb, no specifics, no impact.
- "Worked on the redesign of the company website" - weak verb, no outcome, sounds passive.
Why "responsible for" is the worst phrase on resumes
"Responsible for" describes the job, not your impact. It also signals: "I am about to copy-paste from my job description." Hiring managers see this on every resume; it has lost all meaning.
Other phrases that trigger the same response:
- "Helped with" / "Assisted with" - signals supporting role, not ownership
- "Worked on" - says nothing about role, scope, or outcome
- "Duties included" - identical to "responsible for"
- "Various" - reads as "I cannot remember specifics"
- "Participated in" / "Involved in" - signals presence, not contribution
The fix is always the same: pick the strongest action verb that honestly describes what you did, then quantify the outcome.
How to quantify when you "did not work with numbers"
Almost every accomplishment can be quantified once you push past the first level of "I do not have metrics":
- Volume: How many of [the thing] did you do? Tickets resolved, calls handled, customers onboarded, articles written, designs shipped.
- Time: How long did it take vs. baseline? Onboarding cut from 6 weeks to 3 weeks. Reports automated from 4 hours to 15 minutes.
- Money: Revenue generated, costs cut, budget managed, deals closed.
- People: Team size, customers served, users impacted, stakeholders aligned.
- Quality: Customer satisfaction, error rate, NPS, retention, churn.
- Comparison: Versus team average, versus baseline, versus target, versus industry benchmark.
If you genuinely cannot quantify something, name a specific outcome: "resulting in a new approval process the legal team adopted across all client agreements" is concrete even without a number.
Common mistakes the scorer catches
Beyond weak verbs and missing numbers, the score penalizes:
- Bullets that are too long. Anything over 32 words usually contains two bullets stuck together. Split them.
- Bullets that are too short. Anything under 6 words probably misses context. "Built dashboards" tells a recruiter nothing.
- Buzzword stacking. "Synergized cross-functional alignment to drive impactful outcomes" - this is not on the official penalty list, but it should be.
- Tense inconsistency. Use past tense for past roles, present tense only for your current role. Mixing is a red flag.
- First-person pronouns. Drop "I" - it is implicit in a resume bullet.
How recruiters actually read resumes
Most resumes get a first scan in under 10 seconds. The scanner looks for:
- Job title progression - does the seniority make sense?
- Tenure - any concerning gaps or job-hopping?
- Brand-name signals - recognizable companies, schools, certifications?
- Quantified accomplishments - any numbers that stand out?
If steps 1-3 pass, they read the first 1-2 bullets of your most recent role carefully and skim the rest. That means: front-load your strongest, most-quantified bullet in your most recent role. Anything weaker buried below is fine; nothing weaker should be your opening line.
For a deeper review including section ordering, gap explanations, and ATS optimization, work with our Resume Copilot.
- Job seekers stress-testing resume bullets before submitting
- Anyone preparing for an internal promotion package
- Career changers translating prior roles into target-industry language
- New grads adapting school projects into resume bullets
- Recruiters and resume reviewers using the scorer as a teaching tool
Frequently asked questions
Is a higher score always better?
Does this score work for ATS systems?
What if my industry uses different language conventions?
Can you score my full resume, not just one bullet?
Why are buzzwords not penalized?
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