At a virtual career fair, your resume isn't read — it's skimmed. Recruiters open the file in chat while you're still talking, spend 6 seconds on it, and decide whether you get a 2nd-round interview. Here's how to be in the 6-second pile.
Format: 1 page, PDF, named like an adult
Before content, fix the basics:
- 1 page if you have less than 10 years of experience. 2 pages max, ever.
- PDF only. Word documents render differently on every machine. Don't gamble.
- Filename:
FirstLast-Role-2026.pdf, notresume_final_v3_REAL.pdf. The recruiter searches their inbox by your name later — make it findable. - Black text on white, sans-serif font (Inter, Arial, Helvetica), 10.5–11pt body, single column. Save the creative templates for design portfolios.
The top third decides everything
If your top third doesn't sell you, the bottom two thirds don't matter. Required elements:
- Name + role headline: "Maria Lopez · Data Analyst" — not just "Maria Lopez".
- City + state (e.g. Miami, PA). Recruiters filter local candidates first.
- Phone + email + LinkedIn URL. Skip the home address. Skip "References available on request".
- A 2-line summary: who you are, what you're best at, what you want next. Concrete.
Good summary: "Data analyst with 4 years in SaaS — SQL, Python, dashboards. Looking for senior IC role in Miami or remote-PA team."
Bad summary: "Detail-oriented professional seeking a challenging position to leverage my skills..."
Bullets that recruiters actually read
The 6-second skim covers maybe 12 bullets. Every bullet has to do work. Formula:
Action verb + what you did + quantified result
Examples:
- ✗ "Responsible for managing the company's email program"
- ✓ "Owned weekly email program (180k subscribers); grew CTR from 1.2% to 3.4% in 6 months by rebuilding segmentation"
If a bullet doesn't have a number, ask: can I add one? Time, money, percent, headcount, volume — there's almost always a number.
Tailoring without rewriting
You don't need a custom resume for every booth. You need two versions:
- "Industry A" version — for your primary target (e.g. tech)
- "Industry B" version — for your secondary target (e.g. consulting)
The first 3 bullets of each role change between versions. Everything else stays the same. 90% of the value, 10% of the effort.
The 6-second test
Before the fair, do this with a friend (or out loud to yourself):
- Show them your resume for exactly 6 seconds.
- Take it away.
- Ask: "What do I do, where do I work, and what am I looking for?"
If they can't answer all three, your resume isn't ready. Rework the top third until they can.