How-to
How to write a career change resume
A career change resume has one job: stop the reader from filing you under your old field. That is a translation problem, not an invention problem — your evidence is real, it is just written in the wrong language for the role you want next.
Step 1
Pick one target and write the positioning line
Name the pivot explicitly at the top. A resume aimed at two fields at once reads as aimed at neither.
Step 2
Translate into the target vocabulary
Collect recurring terms from target job descriptions and rewrite your bullets in that language wherever it truthfully applies.
Step 3
Lead with transferable evidence
Reorder each role so the bullets that map to the new field come first, and cut old-field bullets that earn no relevance.
Step 4
Restructure the top of the page
Put a skills or summary block above experience to frame the pivot first — but keep honest chronology below it.
Step 5
Fill gaps with real artifacts
Courses, certifications, shipped projects, freelance work. One real project in the target field outweighs a paragraph of aspiration.