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March 24, 2026How to Write a Resume That Beats ATS in 2026
You spent hours on your resume. You applied to dozens of jobs. And you heard nothing back.
It’s not you. It’s the robot.
Most large companies – and even many small ones – use software called an Applicant Tracking System (ATS) to filter resumes before a human ever sees them. Studies suggest that up to 75% of resumes are rejected by ATS before they reach a hiring manager’s desk.
That means three out of four job seekers are getting screened out automatically – not because they’re unqualified, but because their resume wasn’t formatted correctly.
Here’s how to fix that.
What Is an ATS and How Does It Work?
An ATS is software that scans your resume for specific keywords, formatting, and information that match the job description. It ranks candidates based on how closely their resume aligns with what the employer is looking for.
If your resume doesn’t check the right boxes, it gets filtered out – no matter how qualified you are.
Common ATS platforms include Workday, Taleo, Greenhouse, and iCIMS. Chances are, any job you’ve applied to online in the last few years used one of these.
Why Most Resumes Fail ATS Screening
Here are the most common reasons a resume gets rejected before human eyes ever see it:
1. Wrong File Format
Many ATS systems struggle to read PDFs, especially those created from design tools like Canva. A plain Microsoft Word document (.docx) is almost always the safest choice.
2. Fancy Formatting
Tables, columns, text boxes, headers and footers, and graphics look great to humans but confuse ATS software. The system often can’t read text inside these elements and skips over your best content entirely.
3. Missing Keywords
ATS software scans for specific words and phrases from the job description. If you describe your experience differently than the employer describes the role, the system may not make the connection – even if you’re a perfect fit.
4. Unconventional Section Headings
If your resume says “Where I’ve Been” instead of “Work Experience,” or “What I Know” instead of “Skills,” ATS may not recognize those sections at all.
5. No Quantifiable Results
Modern ATS systems are getting smarter. Many now look for measurable achievements – numbers, percentages, dollar amounts – rather than just listing job duties.
How to Write a Resume That Gets Through ATS
Use a Clean, Simple Format
Stick to a single-column layout with standard fonts like Calibri, Arial, or Georgia. No tables, no text boxes, no graphics. White space is your friend.
Mirror the Job Description
Read the job posting carefully and use the same language the employer uses. If they say “project management” use that phrase – not “managing projects.” If they list specific software or certifications, make sure yours are visible and clearly stated.
Use Standard Section Headings
Stick to conventional labels: Work Experience, Education, Skills, Certifications, Summary. Don’t get creative here – save that for your cover letter.
Load Your Skills Section
Create a dedicated skills section near the top of your resume with a clean list of relevant hard skills, software, certifications, and industry terms. This is prime ATS real estate.
Quantify Everything You Can
Instead of “managed a team,” write “managed a team of 12 sales representatives.” Instead of “increased revenue,” write “increased revenue by 34% over 18 months.” Numbers stand out to both ATS and humans.
Customize for Every Application
This is the one most job seekers skip because it’s time-consuming. But tailoring your resume to each job posting – even just tweaking the summary and skills section – dramatically improves your ATS score.
The Problem With DIY Resume Tools
Free resume builders like Zety, Resume.io, and Canva produce visually appealing resumes. But many of them use templates that are terrible for ATS – heavy on design, light on readability.
A resume that looks beautiful on screen but gets filtered out by software before a human sees it is worthless.
The Bottom Line
Writing an ATS-optimized resume isn’t just about formatting – it’s about strategy. You need to think like the software screening you AND like the human who’ll read it if you make it through.
That’s a hard balance to strike on your own, especially when you’re already dealing with the stress of a job search.
Ready to stop getting filtered out?
At Twin Rivers Communications, we’ve been crafting resumes that get people hired since 1998. Every resume we write is professionally crafted AND reviewed with advanced AI tools to maximize ATS compatibility and keyword impact.
Order your resume today – first draft in 4 to 7 business days, unlimited revisions for 7 days, starting at just $129.
Call or text us at 321-578-8133.

A professional resume writer and digital content specialist with over 25 years of experience helping individuals and businesses communicate effectively. Through Twin Rivers Communications, she provides custom resumes, cover letters, blog posts, ad copy, and social media content tailored to real-world results.