Start HereToolsMoneyJobsHousingPrintablesThe BookGet your Dadgree
HomeJobs & Career › How to write a resume with no experience
Jobs

How to write a resume with no experience

Everyone starts with a blank resume. The skill is translating school, volunteering, and side gigs into things an employer wants to see.

Dad's Quick Take

A first resume is one page: your name and contact, a short summary, your education, any experience (jobs, volunteering, projects, clubs), and your skills. Lead every bullet with an action verb and a result. You have more to say than you think.

The sections you need

Turn 'no experience' into experience

You've done more than you think. Babysitting is responsibility and reliability. A group project is collaboration and deadlines. Running a club's Instagram is marketing. Volunteering is real work. List it.

Write bullets that land

Use the formula action verb + what you did + the result. Numbers make it real.

Beat the robots (ATS)

Many employers use software to scan resumes for keywords from the job post. Mirror the exact skills and titles in the listing, keep formatting simple, and save as a PDF unless they ask otherwise.

Pair this with the cover-letter guide and the STAR interview method to go from resume to offer.

Get your Dadgree

Quick rules

Common questions

Should I include a GPA?

If it's strong (≈3.5+) and you're early-career, yes. Otherwise leave it off and let experience speak.

Do I need a fancy template?

No. Clean and readable beats flashy, and plain layouts survive the ATS scanners better.

← Back to Jobs & Career

Sunday with Dadgree

One short, friendly email a week — a real-life skill, a checklist, and a little encouragement. Free, and you can leave anytime.

No spam. No selling your info. Just the stuff Mom and Dad meant to tell you.

Dadgree uses minimal cookies to make the site work and understand traffic. By using the site, you agree to this. See our Privacy Policy.