Let’s be real: building a resume or LinkedIn profile when you’re still in college (or just getting started) can feel awkward. What do you even write if you haven’t had a “real job” yet?
Here’s the good news: You have more to offer than you think. Your projects, part-time jobs, volunteer work, and even group assignments say a lot about your potential. Let’s break this down into a practical, step-by-step guide so you can build a resume and LinkedIn profile that actually get noticed.
Keep it simple. Use a modern resume template from Google Docs, Canva, or Novoresume. Stick to one page.
Tip: Save it as a PDF before sending it anywhere.
1. Contact Info
Your name, email, phone number, LinkedIn profile link
2. Summary (Optional but Helpful)
Write 2-3 lines about who you are and what you’re working toward.
Example:
“Second-year business student passionate about social media strategy, consumer psychology, and data analytics. Eager to contribute creativity and analysis to real-world marketing projects.”
3. Education
List your school, degree, expected graduation year, and GPA (if it’s 3.0 or higher). You can also include:
Relevant coursework
Honors or Dean’s List
4. Skills
Use a mix of hard and soft skills:
Hard: Excel, Python, Canva, Google Analytics
Soft: Time management, collaboration, adaptability
5. Projects
Highlight class assignments, capstone projects, or even personal side projects.
Example: “Led a team of 4 to develop a social media campaign for a local non-profit. Increased Instagram engagement by 60% in one month.”
6. Leadership & Volunteering
Did you organize a fundraiser? Tutor someone? Plan events in your dorm? It counts.
7. (Optional) Experience
Part-time jobs, internships, babysitting, family business work—it’s all experience.
Example:
“Cashier, Target (Summer 2023): Handled 50+ customer transactions per shift and managed inventory restocking. Learned how to stay calm under pressure.”
LinkedIn is your digital resume and networking tool. Most students ignore it. Don’t.
No need for a suit. Use natural lighting, a plain background, and wear something simple. Ask a friend with a good phone camera.
Skip “Student at XYZ University.” Say something about your goals.
Example:
“Marketing Student | Social Media Intern | Future Brand Strategist”
Make this human. Tell your story. Use short paragraphs or bullets.
Example:
Marketing major at Rutgers University
Passionate about helping brands connect with Gen Z audiences
Ran a food blog on Instagram with 2,000+ followers
Looking for internship opportunities in content strategy or social media marketing
Even unpaid work matters. Add group projects, classwork, or club roles.
Example:
“Social Media Lead, Student Council: Planned and posted weekly updates across Instagram and Facebook. Doubled engagement in one semester.”
Add 5–10 skills like:
Canva
SEO
Event Planning
Data Visualization
Team Leadership
Ask a classmate or professor to endorse you.
Did a professor or club advisor see your work ethic? Ask them to write a few lines on your profile.
Follow companies you love. Connect with alumni. Share articles or comment with thoughtful takes. It helps.
Keep resume to one page
Use an email that sounds professional (firstname.lastname@gmail.com)
Customize your LinkedIn URL: linkedin.com/in/yourname
Update both your resume and LinkedIn every 6 months
Spellcheck. Always.
Canva Resume Builder: canva.com/resumes
Zety or Novoresume for sleek templates
LinkedIn Profile Tips: Check linkedin.com/student
AI Tools (Use for Suggestions Only): ChatGPT, Kickresume, Rezi
Ask a professor, TA, or even a recent grad in your field to review your resume or LinkedIn. One small tip could make a huge difference.
“You don’t need some impressive title to catch attention. What really stands out is showing genuine interest, asking questions, and putting in consistent effort. Start now—you’ll be glad you did later on.”