Remote Resume Guide: How to Position Yourself for Remote Roles
Your resume doesn’t need to be perfect. It needs to be specific, results-forward, and clearly written for a remote context. Here is how to get there in 90 minutes.
What makes a remote resume different
Most resumes were written for an in-office job hunt. They describe duties, use vague language, and assume the hiring manager knows what your previous company did. For remote roles, two things change:
- Remote-readiness must be visible. Hiring managers at remote-first companies look for signals that you can work asynchronously, communicate in writing, and self-manage. These signals live in your bullets, not your cover letter.
- Positioning must be explicit. In a stack of 200 remote applicants, “experienced operations professional” disappears. A clear value statement does not.
The positioning formula
Before you touch the resume, write this sentence:
do [valuable outcome]
using [skills / tools].”
This becomes your resume summary, your LinkedIn About opener, and your cold DM opening line. Examples:
- I help small businesses clean up messy CRM and reporting systems.
- I help marketing teams coordinate campaigns, analytics, and content workflows.
- I help customer support teams improve documentation and internal processes.
Remote resume checklist
- Summary line uses the positioning formula above
- “Remote” or “Remote-ready” appears in the location field
- Every bullet begins with a strong past-tense verb (Led, Built, Managed, Cut, Shipped)
- At least 3 bullets include a measurable result (%, $, number of people, time saved)
- Tools listed explicitly: Slack, Notion, Asana, Zoom, Google Workspace, etc.
- No “responsible for” language — describe what you actually did
- No tables, columns, or text boxes in the body (ATS cannot parse them)
- One page under 10 years of experience; two pages maximum
- Saved as PDF with your name in the filename
The bullet formula
| Before | After |
|---|---|
| Responsible for managing vendor relationships and invoices. | Managed 8 vendor contracts and cut invoice processing time 30% by building a shared Notion tracker. |
| Helped coordinate team project deadlines. | Coordinated cross-functional deadlines for a 12-person team across 3 time zones, reducing missed milestones 40% in Q3. |
| Wrote customer-facing documentation. | Authored 40+ help center articles that reduced support ticket volume 18% over two quarters. |
Skills and tools section
Add a dedicated tools row near the top of your resume. For remote roles, this section does more work than it does for in-office applications because remote hiring managers actively scan for tool familiarity.
- Communication: Slack, Zoom, Loom, Google Meet
- Project management: Asana, Notion, Jira, Trello, Monday.com
- Documentation: Confluence, Notion, Google Docs
- Data: Google Sheets, Airtable, Excel, basic SQL
- CRM: HubSpot, Salesforce, Zoho
Only list tools you can actually use in a work context. “Proficient in Excel” with no examples is a red flag.
LinkedIn profile quick fixes
- Headline: use the positioning formula, not your current job title
- About section: open with your positioning sentence, add 2–3 sentences of context
- Location: set to “Remote” or your city + “Open to Remote”
- Featured section: link to a portfolio piece, case study, or your tracker template
- Open to Work: turn it on privately for recruiters — do not fear the green banner
The Launch Kit includes the Resume Positioning Worksheet and a fill-in Google Doc template.