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The experience sections typically form the bulk of the résumé content. Each experience is comprised typically of three to five experience bullet points. These bullet points should provide specific evidence from your various experiences that back up the claims you make in your summary of qualifications.

When choosing to include your experiences, sections you might immediately think of are titled “Work Experience” and “Volunteer Experience.” These sections are commonly included in résumés, but there are other types of sections that can be used. You may, for example, present your experiences as clusters of a similar type under one heading, such as “Academic Projects” or “Communications Experience”.

Within the experience sections, you have flexibility regarding which headings you decide to include and how you choose to order them. Knowing your options for your experience sections gives you flexibility and control over how you’d like to organize and prioritize your experiences in a persuasive way. You can curate your headings to show employers what you want them to see. You may want to consult with trusted contacts for advice on common heading names and arrangements used in the industry you are targeting.

Crafting a résumé often involves balancing your desire to stand out from other candidates by articulating your unique strengths while considering the expectations and conventions of your target sector. It’s a delicate balancing act!

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What if I don’t have any Canadian work experience?

According to the Ontario Human Rights Code, employers are not legally permitted to ask if you have Canadian work experience because it may result in discrimination. Canadian work experience is not a good indicator of future job performance. Where you got your experience should not matter.

Your international work experience is important, relevant and demonstrates your competencies. You can always include your academic or volunteer experience in Canada alongside your international work experience. This demonstrates how you have applied your competencies across different cultural settings.

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Formatting experiences

Within the majority of experience sections, you will include your role title, employer name, month/year of start date, month/year of the end date and location (“City, Province” or if outside Canada, “City, Country”). If relevant, create 3-5 bullet points describing your experience and accomplishments.

When listing your international experience (work, internship or volunteer), where necessary, conduct research and/or consult with trusted advisors to describe your role in a way that is both authentic and well-understood in a Canadian context.

You may want to identify the prestige or defining quality of employers outside of Canada to educate and orient Canadian hiring managers. An entry could appear as follows: job title, company name (defining quality or stature). For example, “Sales Manager, XYZ retailer (one of the top 5 retailers in Chennai state).”

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Experience headings

The following are some common experience headings used in résumés:

  • Work Experience

  • Professional Experience

  • Employment Experience

  • Volunteer Experience

  • Additional Experience

  • Other Experience

  • Extracurricular Activities

For relevant work experience, other possible heading titles include:

  • Relevant Experience

  • Relevant Employment

  • Selected Work Experience

Learn more about some experience sections below that you can use in your résumé.

Relevant experience

The relevant experience section allows you to feature your most relevant experience — even if it’s not the most recent. This is a great option if your recent roles are less relevant than past experiences. You may group relevant experiences from paid work, co-op, volunteer or academic experiences. This approach can maximize impact and entice the reader.

Other somewhat related experiences could be included in an “Additional Experience” section. It can be helpful to include in brackets after a role title whether the work was full-time, part-time, contract or an internship (e.g., Project Assistant (contract, part-time)).

Work experience

The work experience section contains relevant paid or unpaid work and should be selective, ensuring you only include relevant experiences. You may wish to call it Relevant Experience” if you have additional work experience sections. If you’ve had many work experiences, you may want to use the heading “Selected Work Experiences,” “Employment History” is typically used when referring to all your paid work experience to date.

The work experience section is one place to highlight any internship, co-op and/or work-integrated learning (WIL) experiences, as well as research and teaching assistantships. Alternatively, these types of experiences could also fit under a “Project Experience,” “Relevant Experience,” or “Additional Experiences” section. Where they fit best depends on the nature of the experience and how it relates to your other experiences (e.g., project-based experiences such as WE Accelerate could fit well under a project experience section).

Project experience

A project experience section highlights projects from your academic, work or volunteer experience. This could include experiences such as research and teaching assistantship positions, project-based work-integrated learning experiences, student club projects, a thesis or major course projects. You may prefer to place these experiences under a work experience or volunteer experience section (e.g., project-based experiences such as WE Accelerate could fit well under a project experience section).

Volunteer experience

The volunteer experience section includes any relevant volunteer roles you’ve held throughout your career. Like work experience, volunteer experience demonstrates your competencies and achievements specific to your field and/or transferrable skills. Many employers value volunteer work as it demonstrates that you are motivated and interested in giving back to your community. Including this experience on your résumé could make you more attractive to potential employers.

Volunteer experience can include various activities where you give your time or services with no financial gain. If you are engaged in co-curricular activities such as volunteering with a student club, you may want to include them in an extracurricular activities section or combine them in a volunteer and extracurricular activities section.

You may include your volunteer experience in one of the following ways depending on its relevance to the job for which you’re applying:

  • If your volunteer activities are as relevant as your paid work experience, consider adding the volunteer role to your work experience section and indicate (volunteer or unpaid) after the role title.

    • e.g., event planner (volunteer)

  • If you wish to highlight your volunteer activities separately from your work experience, use a separate heading

    • e.g., Volunteer Activities, Volunteer Experience, Community Service

  • If your volunteer activities and associated skills are not relevant to the work you are seeking, consider including them in an activities and interests section

  • Regardless of the heading you list your volunteer experience under, list the organizations you volunteered and the location and, if relevant, add detail about your contributions, beginning each point with an action verb. Remember, you can develop key skills through volunteer work that employers may see as relevant to the work they want you to do.

  • If you’re concerned about including information that might disclose your ethnicity, religion or political or sexual orientation, you can use generic terms (e.g., team leader, local youth group) if you prefer not to disclose. For support in making this decision, consider booking an appointment with a career advisor.

What if my volunteer experience doesn’t have a role title?

Quite often, volunteer positions may not have a formal role title. In some cases, you can use the title “volunteer.” In other cases, you can choose to create a title. For example, if you mentored in a volunteer role, you could call the role “mentor” or “volunteer mentor.”

For graduate work where you may take on volunteer work that has no role title, you can include it as “graduate researcher”, “volunteer” or “departmental volunteer.” There there is creative freedom to create a title for a the work/role that does not have one, if . Ensure that the title you create helps to accurately reflects reflect your responsibilities in that role (e.g., departmental volunteer).

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Experience bullet points

How to write effective bullet points

It can be daunting for many people to describe what they have undertaken in various roles. Some feel more comfortable downplaying or disregarding their contributions. It’s perfectly understandable if you find it challenging to articulate what you did, how you did it and what result or impact your actions had. For this and other reasons, writing bullet points isn't easy for many people

To make writing experience bullet points easier, update your résumé with key accomplishments or skills you developed immediately after you finish a job, experience or project. Keeping a copy of the job description or course syllabus can be helpful when finding the language to describe the experience.

Take the time to identify the tasks you carried out and the skills you developed. This enhances your awareness of your contributions and their value. It also empowers you to describe them in your cover letter and interviews convincingly. Let's get started!

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General tips:

  • Order bullet points for each experience, from most to least relevant to the type of work you’re seeking or the specific position you’re applying to. For example, if you engaged in an activity or used a particular skill only 10% of the time but it’s very relevant to the prospective position, consider listing that bullet at or near the beginning.

  • Emphasize in greater detail within each bullet point, the tasks and accomplishments that are most relevant. For example, in a bullet point about report writing, emphasize that you conducted literature searches if that aspect of the report writing experience is most relevant.

  • Consider including some accomplishment statements. These are experience bullet points that describe a result, impact or learning.

  • Use the present tense for ongoing jobs and the past tense for past jobs (e.g., prepare vs. prepared).

  • Emphasize transferable skills for work experiences that are not directly related, (e.g., if you worked as a server and are applying for an administrative role, you could emphasize your ability to work under pressure, communication, interpersonal skills and attention to detail.)

  • It is typical practice to not use personal pronouns such as “I” and “my” when describing an experience. Indicate your level of responsibility (e.g., “managing a department at times when supervisor absent.”)

  • Avoid vague phrases such as “responsible for” or “duties included” and replace with words that are more precise, meaningful and unique to your experience.

  • Start each bullet point with a strong action verb that most accurately and powerfully describes your contribution.

Ready, set, action verbs

Each experience bullet point should begin with an action verb. Select one that is precise, accurate and will create a vivid image of your accomplishment. Avoid repeating the same action verb. Using a variety of verbs can help you showcase your different skill sets and abilities.

Analyzing the job ad can also help you select appropriate action verbs. For ideas, refer to this list of action verbs. Remember that all action verbs are not created equal. Avoid vague verbs like “helped,” “assisted,” and “participated,” as they may not provide a clear picture of what you've done and your unique contribution.

If you learned something on the job (e.g., how to use new software) but did not have a chance to use it, you may wish to include a “learned” statement (e.g., learned how to use Excel).

How do I articulate contributions as part of a group project or team?

Contributions you’ve made to a group project or team are valuable additions to your résumé. If you were a member of a two-person team, consider using “co-” as the prefix to the action verb describing your role (e.g., co-edited user’s manual).

For teams of more than two people, consider describing the specific scope and/or results of your role and end by indicating that others were involved (e.g., Edited user’s manual for XYZ software as a member of the communications team).

Experience bullet points vs. accomplishment statements

There are two different kinds of bullet points you may want to include in your experience sections:

Experience bullet points

Accomplish statements

  • Should describe a specific experience and provide supporting evidence to back up claims made in the summary of qualifications.

  • Are included in the following sections: work experience, volunteer experience, etc. You may occasionally decide to include them in sections such as education, activities and interests.

  • Make up the majority of your bullet points

  • Do not include a result, impact or learning

  • Are experience bullet points that include a result, impact or learning

  • Should highlight not just what you did, but what you did well

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Try your best to identify some accomplishment statements to weave into your résumé. This will strengthen the case that you are someone who makes valuable contributions and has the self-knowledge, confidence and analytical ability to articulate them.

Qualitative vs. quantitative accomplishment statements

There are two types of accomplishment statements: quantitative and qualitative. Quantitative statements measure your accomplishments with hard data, whereas qualitative statements measure your accomplishments by describing the impact.

In some industries it may be easier to quantify an accomplishment, such as in marketing (e.g., increased sales by 20%). If you don’t have concrete numbers to back up your claims, you can always consider the qualitative results of your actions (e.g., receiving a job promotion) or a learning (e.g., refined active listening skills).

Examples of experience bullet points and accomplishment statements

Below are some examples of experience bullet points (columns A + B) and accomplishment statements (columns A + B+ C).

Column A: Action verb

Column B: What you did/how you did it

Column C: Result/impact/learning

Planned, organized and coordinated

high school graduation formal as member of three-person team

resulting in highest turnout in history of school 

[quantitative]

Presented

business proposal to prospective clients in China using professional proficiency in Mandarin

resulting in six new contracts 

[quantitative]

Mentored

24 new international employees by organizing monthly events

to help them adjust to a fast-paced culturally diverse setting 

[qualitative]

Collaborated with

specialists in India and Turkey to create a global campaign

to re-launch a series of products to the market
[qualitative]

Trained

as lead cashier

balancing the cash drawer with 99% accuracy 

[quantitative]

Led

as top sales associate for three consecutive months

for approximately 30 residents for families of ill children 

[quantitative]

Recognized

a team of ten volunteers in planning, preparing and serving a bi-weekly meal

which resulted in a promotion to sales supervisor 

[result]

Created and produced

an eight-page monthly newsletter for the international student association

that is distributed to 3000 college students 

[quantitative]

Represented

the college by meeting and guiding tours for prospective students and their families

resulting in a 10% increase in enrolment for the academic year 

[quantitative]

Recruited and trained

0 college student volunteers to tutor 5th grade remedial reading students

resulting in a 15% increase in test scores 

[quantitative]

Co-wrote

44-page review of existing research that formed the rationale for proposal request

resulted in a $2,000 research grant 

[quantitative]

Reviewed

4000 preventative maintenance procedures for computer chips and eliminated 1000 extraneous procedures

reducing the cost of transferring data by nearly $10,000 

[quantitative]

Improved

the loading time of a new software program

by ten seconds 

[quantitative]

Planned and promoted

15 guest speaker events on campus

a 50% increase from the previous year 

[quantitative]

Simplified

admittance procedures by applying advanced Excel skills (PivotTables and advanced charting) and electronic medical record software

to retrieve and manage patient records 

[qualitative]

Collaborated

regularly with clients

developing active listening and sales skills 

[learning]

Excelled

in expanding students and cancer survivor’s participation through social media platforms, school announcements and flyers

which increased the impact of the event in our community 

[qualitative- but vague]