How to Write an Executive Resume in 2026

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The executive resume is a different document: At senior level, the reader already assumes you can do the job. What they're evaluating is the scope of what you've done, the scale at which you've done it, and whether your leadership philosophy fits what they're building. Every section of your resume has to answer those questions.

Most people write their executive resume the same way they wrote their first resume: a list of jobs, a list of duties, a list of skills. At the Director, VP, or C-suite level, that approach fails. The document needs to function differently — less a record of employment, more a case for what you uniquely bring to a leadership role.

Length and Format

At executive level, two pages is the standard. Three is acceptable for very senior roles with 20+ years of leadership experience or an extensive portfolio of board positions, publications, and speaking engagements. One page is too compressed — it signals you don't have enough to say, or that you haven't thought deeply enough about your value.

Formatting should be clean, professional, and quiet. No columns, no icons, no colour bars. The document should look like it belongs in a boardroom. Stick to a single professional typeface, strong hierarchy through size and weight, and plenty of white space. Let the content do the work.

Name, professional title (your current level or the level you're targeting), location (city is enough — no full address), phone, email, and LinkedIn URL. If you have a personal website or a notable publication portfolio, include that too.

Your title line matters more than most people realise. It immediately signals your positioning. "Chief Operating Officer | Operations Transformation | Scale-up to Enterprise" tells a very different story than just "COO." Use this space to communicate your specialisation within your level.

The Executive Summary

This is the most important paragraph on the document. Write it last, after everything else is done. It should be four to six lines — no more — and should answer three things:

  1. What kind of leader are you, specifically?
  2. What is the signature outcome you're known for?
  3. What context do you operate best in?
Results-driven executive with 20 years of experience across multiple industries. Proven track record of delivering results and leading high-performing teams in fast-paced environments.
Revenue-focused COO with 18 years building and scaling operations at B2B SaaS companies from Series B through IPO. Most recently led a 340-person operations function through a $2.1B acquisition, maintaining 99.7% service continuity throughout the transition. Known for building the cross-functional infrastructure that lets commercial teams move faster without adding risk.

The second version tells you exactly who this person is, what scale they've operated at, what their signature achievement looks like, and what problem they solve. It does all of that in four sentences.

Core Achievements Section

Immediately after your summary, include a section titled "Selected Achievements" or "Career Highlights" — a curated list of four to six of your most impressive, quantified accomplishments across your career. These don't have to be in chronological order. Pick the ones that best represent your leadership impact.

Format: one or two lines each, starting with a strong verb, including a specific metric, and contextualising the scale. Example:

Work Experience at Executive Level

Each role should include: company name, brief context (what the company does and its scale — revenue, headcount, or stage), your title, dates, and three to five bullet points. The bullets should focus exclusively on decisions, outcomes, and leadership scope. Not responsibilities.

Responsible for managing the finance department and overseeing financial reporting, budgeting, and compliance activities across the organisation.
Rebuilt the company's finance function from a 4-person reporting team to a 22-person strategic partner across FP&A, treasury, and commercial finance — reducing close time from 14 days to 4, and enabling the board to make capital allocation decisions with same-week data.

Go back no more than 15–18 years in your detailed experience. Earlier roles can be listed in a brief section called "Early Career" with just company, title, and dates — no bullets needed.

Board Positions and Advisory Roles

If you hold or have held board positions, NED roles, or advisory positions, these belong on the resume — usually after your main experience section. They signal credibility, network, and the respect of peers. List them with the organisation, your role, and the date range. One line each is enough unless you want to highlight a specific contribution.

The Five Most Common Executive Resume Mistakes

1. Writing a management resume instead of a leadership resume

Management bullets describe what you oversaw. Leadership bullets describe the decisions you made and why, and what changed as a result. At executive level, you need the latter.

2. No P&L, no headcount, no scale

Every significant role should contextualise your scope: the budget you controlled, the headcount you led, the revenue you were responsible for. Without this, the reader can't assess your level.

3. A generic summary

If your executive summary could belong to any of the 200 other candidates applying for this role, it will be treated as such. Specificity is what separates the shortlist from the pile.

4. Going too far back

Listing roles from 25 years ago in detail tells the reader that you haven't done anything more impressive since. Truncate early career ruthlessly.

5. No LinkedIn alignment

Executive-level hires are researched thoroughly. Your resume and LinkedIn profile need to tell the same story. Any inconsistency in dates, titles, or claims will be noticed and questioned.

Executive resume writing takes longer than you think. Budget a full day for the first draft. The summary alone often takes two or three hours to get right. If you're actively searching, it's worth the investment — a weak executive resume at this level is expensive.

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