Resume & Profile Tips
How to Build a Standout Resume as a Fresher (2025)

How to Build a Standout Resume as a Fresher (2025)
Getting your first job is exciting but scary. Your resume is your first impression. Here's how to make it count!
What to Include in Your Resume
1. Contact Information
Keep it simple and professional:
- Full name
- Phone number (with WhatsApp if possible)
- Professional email ID (avoid funny names like coolboy123@gmail.com)
- LinkedIn profile (if you have one)
- Location (City name is enough)
2. Career Objective
Write 2-3 lines about what you want. Keep it honest and specific.
Example: "Recent B.Tech graduate seeking a software developer role where I can apply my Java and Python skills to build quality applications and grow as a professional."
3. Education
Start with your latest degree first:
- Degree name (B.Tech, BCA, B.Com, etc.)
- College/University name
- Year of passing
- Percentage or CGPA
- Include 12th and 10th details too
4. Skills
List skills that match the job you want:
- Technical skills (programming languages, tools, software)
- Soft skills (communication, teamwork, problem-solving)
- Languages you know
Tip: Don't lie about skills. If you write "Expert in Python," be ready to prove it!
5. Projects
This is VERY important for freshers! List 2-4 projects:
- Project name
- Brief description (what problem it solves)
- Technologies used
- Your role (if group project)
- Add GitHub link if possible
6. Internships (if any)
Even a 2-week internship counts! Include:
- Company name
- Duration
- What you learned or did
7. Certifications & Courses
Free courses matter too! Add:
- Coursera, Udemy, NPTEL courses
- Online certifications
- Workshop participation
8. Achievements
Don't be shy! Add:
- Hackathon participation
- College fest coordination
- Sports achievements
- Volunteer work
- Any competition wins
Resume Format Tips
Keep It Simple
- Use 1 page only (maximum 2 pages)
- Use simple fonts like Arial or Calibri
- Font size 10-12 points
- Proper spacing between sections
Design
- Clean and professional look
- No fancy colors (black and one accent color is best)
- Use bullet points, not paragraphs
- Leave white space - don't cram everything
File Format
- Save as PDF (not Word document)
- Name it properly: "YourName_Resume.pdf"
- Keep file size under 2 MB
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Don't do these:
- Including photo (unless specifically asked)
- Adding personal details like age, religion, marital status
- Using unprofessional email IDs
- Spelling mistakes and grammar errors
- Lying about skills or experience
- Using templates with too much design
- Making it too long
Action Words to Use
Start your points with strong verbs:
- Developed, Created, Built, Designed
- Managed, Coordinated, Organized
- Analyzed, Solved, Improved
- Collaborated, Assisted, Contributed
Quick Tips for 2025
-
ATS-Friendly: Many companies use software to screen resumes. Use simple formatting and include keywords from the job description.
-
Online Presence: Keep your LinkedIn updated. Many recruiters check it.
-
Customize: Don't send the same resume everywhere. Adjust it slightly for each job.
-
GitHub Profile: If you're in tech, keep your GitHub active with projects.
-
Portfolio: For designers or developers, a simple portfolio website helps a lot.
Where to Create Your Resume
Free Tools:
- Canva (easy templates)
- Google Docs (simple and clean)
- Overleaf (for LaTeX resumes - looks professional)
- Resume.io
- Novoresume
Final Words
Your resume is your story on paper. Keep it honest, simple, and relevant. Focus on what you CAN do, not what you can't. Every project, every course, every skill matters.
Remember: Even CEOs were freshers once. Start somewhere, start today!
Good luck with your job search! You've got this! 🎯
Last updated: October 2025



