Luke Gough@Avidityrecruit
Most cybersecurity CVs often get rejected. Here's what's actually costing people interviews.
As a recruiter, I can tell you that most CVs miss the mark in the same ways. And it's not about qualifications.
The first thing I look for is relevance. Your CV needs to match the language of the job description. If the role talks about SIEM tools and you've used Splunk for three years but never mentioned it, that's a miss. Mirror the terminology hiring managers use.
Second, I want to see outcomes, not just duties. "Managed firewall rules" tells me nothing. "Reduced unauthorised access incidents by 40% through firewall policy overhaul" tells me a lot.
Numbers matter, even rough ones.
Third, certifications need context. Having a CISSP is great, but if you list it without showing how you applied it, it becomes noise. Tie your certs to real work.
Finally, length. Two pages ideally, three maximum. Hiring managers in cyber are busy people. If your CV runs to four pages, you're telling me you can't prioritise, which is ironic for a security professional.