I've Reviewed 500 Resumes: The Top 3 Are All One Page
Over the past four years I have sat on the hiring side of the table for three different tech companies. I have personally reviewed somewhere north of 500 resumes for roles ranging from junior front...

Source: DEV Community
Over the past four years I have sat on the hiring side of the table for three different tech companies. I have personally reviewed somewhere north of 500 resumes for roles ranging from junior frontend developer to senior platform engineer. And the pattern that emerged was so consistent it almost felt like cheating once I noticed it. The three best resumes I ever received were all one page. Not because there is something magical about a single sheet of paper. But because the constraint forces a kind of clarity that most candidates never achieve. When you only have one page, every line has to earn its place. That discipline shows up immediately, and it signals something about how you think. Let me walk through what I learned sitting on that side of the desk, and what actually moves a resume from the rejection pile to the interview pile. The 7.4-Second Reality There is an eye-tracking study from Ladders that gets cited a lot, and for good reason. They found that recruiters spend an averag