Resume Best Practices (2026) – Write a Title, Headline, & Summary That Stand Out (In a Good Way)

“Who even is this person?”
That was the first thing I thought when I glanced at a resume a client brought to our session.

They’d spent hours polishing bullet points, refining action verbs, and agonizing over formatting, but the title just said “Professional,” the headline was blank, and the summary… well, it was a generic paragraph I’m 97% sure was pulled straight from a 2012 resume template.

And that’s where we began.


🧭 Why Title, Headline, and Summary Matter So Much

Think of your resume as a billboard. You’ve got two seconds to grab attention before the reader scrolls past.

Your title (right under your name) tells them where you’re headed.
Your headline tells them why they should want to go with you.
Your summary gives them a quick peek behind the curtain at the incredible human they’re about to hire.


🎯 Step 1: The Title – Make It Role-Specific

Your title should match the job you’re applying for, not necessarily the job you have now.

Yes, really.

Recruiters search by job title. If you want to show up in their results and land in the “YES” pile, your title should reflect the role you’re targeting (as long as it’s truthful to your experience).

Example:

Instead of “Marketing Professional,” write “Email Marketing Specialist | CRM Optimization | Campaign Strategy”

🔁 Tailor this title for each application. This tiny change can dramatically increase your visibility.


🌟 Step 2: The Headline – Why Would People Love Working With You?

Here’s the thing: Hiring managers aren’t just looking for skills. They’re looking for people. Colleagues. Collaborators. Partners in crime (of the legal, workplace-friendly variety).

This is where you inject your personality and value proposition.

Ask yourself:
→ What do people say about me at work?
→ Why do teammates or clients love working with me?

Then distill that into a one-liner.

Examples:

  • “Creative puzzle-solver who thrives in messy systems and turns chaos into calm.”
  • “Tech translator who bridges business needs and engineering logic.”
  • “Compassionate leader who once rescued a team from total collapse.”

It’s your career tagline. Wear it proudly.


✍️ Step 3: The Summary – Let Them See You

We’re not writing a novel here. Go with 3 sentences max, and make them count.

Instead of droning on with clichés (“results-driven professional with 10 years of experience…”), use this space to offer a brief, compelling peek into:

  • Your motivation (Why you do what you do)
  • Your culture fit (What type of environments you thrive in)
  • Your standout skills or impact (Bonus points for numbers or results)

Formula to try:
First, think “I’m a [role] driven by [motivation]. I love working in [type of environment] where I can [unique contribution]. My work has led to [result or impact].”

Then, distill it into your summary. Remove articles (a, the) and pronouns (I).

Example:

“Customer success manager passionate about helping clients feel heard. Invigorated by fast-moving, people-first cultures. Success driving cross-functional collaboration to reduce churn by 35% across three quarters.”

This summary gives hiring teams a window into your why, how, and impact and makes you feel like a real human, not just a keyword repository.


🧬 Unique Identifiers: Stand Out Without Screaming

In all three sections—title, headline, and summary—use your voice.

If you’re quirky, be quirky.
If you’re driven, let it show.
If you’re a people-connector, sprinkle that sparkle.

Avoid overused phrases like “self-starter,” “go-getter,” and “team player.” Instead, demonstrate those qualities with authentic, specific language.

TIP: Think of this entire section as demonstrating what makes you the least risky candidate.


🔁 Recap: How to Build the Top Section of Your Resume Like a Pro

  • Title: Reflects the role you’re applying for. Clear and role-specific.
  • Headline: Tells us why you’re awesome to work with. Genuine and punchy.
  • Summary: Offers a human glimpse of who you are, how you work, and what you bring.

Your resume is your chance to say, “Hey, here’s what I do, how I do it, and why you’re going to love working with me.”

If your title, headline, and summary aren’t answering those questions, it’s time for a refresh.


Need help finding your authentic headline?
Or want a pro to transform your three-line summary into a mini power punch?

👉 I’m here for you.

Visit https://kyladuffy.com for expert career coaching and resume services that help you get noticed…and hired.

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