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Home Resume Mastery

5 Resume Red Flags That Will Get You Passed Over — Again

And how to fix them before your application hits the trash

Susan Langley by Susan Langley
May 9, 2025
in Resume Mastery
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Resume REDFLAGS
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When you’ve been passed over one too many times, it stops feeling like bad luck and starts feeling personal.

I’ve seen this pattern play out hundreds of times in students and mid-career professionals I’ve worked with: bright, capable people stuck in invisible traps — ones they didn’t even know they walked into.

Let’s talk about those traps. The ones hiring managers can spot in five seconds. The ones that get you eliminated before your resume even loads completely.

Checklist for Resume and avoiding red flags

These are your resume red flags. And unless you learn how to spot and fix them, they’ll haunt every job application you send.

Why Resume Red Flags Matter (More Than Ever)

Hiring managers don’t read resumes. They scan them.

You’ve got six seconds. Maybe seven if they’re generous. That means any mistake—big or small—can cost you the interview, and you’ll never even know why.

Let’s break down the five biggest resume red flags that are killing your chances in 2025—and what to do instead.

Red Flag 1: Vagueness That Screams “I Did Nothing”

“Responsible for managing projects”
“Worked on improving processes”

These sound safe. But safe = invisible.

Hiring managers want specifics. If you didn’t move a number or ship a result, you’re noise.

Fix it: Use action verbs + outcomes.
Instead of: “Led client communications”
Say: “Led weekly updates across 3 global teams, reducing client churn by 12%”

Red Flag 2: Gaps That Look Like You Went Missing

Let’s be honest—life happens. Layoffs, illness, burnout. You don’t need to lie.

But if you say nothing, recruiters will assume the worst.

Fix it: Address the gap in a simple, confident one-liner.
Example: “2022–2023: Career pause to care for family. During this time, completed certifications in data analytics and project management.”

Gaps aren’t red flags. Silence is.

Resume writing Style

Red Flag 3: Style Over Substance

Your resume isn’t a fashion show.

We’ve all seen those Canva monstrosities with pink borders and five logos.

Guess what recruiters do? They roll their eyes and close the tab.

Fix it: Stick to clean formatting. Avoid colors, photos, and unnecessary graphics. ATS (Applicant Tracking Systems) hate them.
Content > Creativity. Every. Single. Time.

Red Flag 4: Buzzword Soup

“Strategic thought leader with synergistic cross-functional innovation experience.”

If your resume reads like a corporate parody, you’re doing it wrong.

Fix it: Cut the fluff. Write like a human, not a LinkedIn influencer.
Real people hire real people.

Resume Red Flags - Stop These mistakes

Red Flag 5: Typos — The Career Killer

Misspelling “Professional” as “Proffesional”? Instant death.

Fix it: Use Grammarly. Ask a friend. Read it backward.
Do whatever it takes, because if you can’t proofread a one-page document, no one’s giving you a $90K job.

Bonus: The 5 Most Common Resume Mistakes I See Weekly

These are based on real examples sent to me by frustrated, mid-career professionals:

  1. Listing every job since 2002 — no one cares.
  2. Using “References available upon request.”
  3. Adding personal hobbies like “Watching Netflix.”
  4. Using Times New Roman in size 9 font.
  5. Writing an Objective Statement — we’re not in 2005.

Common Questions About Resume Red Flags

Are gaps in resume red flags?

Not if you explain them. Gaps without context = red flag. Gaps with a story = human.

What are the 2 biggest resume red flags?

  1. No measurable results.
  2. No clarity on what you actually did.

What are some common resume mistakes to avoid?

Buzzwords. Typos. Wall of text. Overstyling. And worst of all—underselling yourself.

Resume Preparation Research

For Mid-Career Professionals Like John

If you’re like John — quietly grinding after hours, haunted by younger colleagues with louder voices and shinier credentials — this matters.

This article is your armor. These fixes are your shield.

Every mistake you correct gives you one more chance to be seen. Not passed over.

Final Thought From Susan

I don’t believe in empty motivation. I believe in competence, self-respect, and strategic execution.

Your resume isn’t a story of where you’ve been. It’s a map of where you’re going.

Clean it up. Power it up (Check Resume Powerups section). Sharpen it. And start walking toward the career you’ve earned.

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Susan Langley

Susan Langley

Sue grew up in a small New England town near Montpelier, VT. Her upbringing was filled with books, long hikes in the woods, and spirited dinner debates about politics and philosophy. From an early age, she was curious about why people made the choices they did — from choosing cereal brands to voting patterns. She won a scholarship to attend college, where she majored in psychology and minored in economics. Later, she earned her Ph.D. in Behavioral Economics at Ivy League college, focusing her dissertation on decision fatigue in high-stakes environments. After a stint advising public policy in D.C., she moved to Colorado to teach and raise a family closer to nature.

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