Soft skills that hiring managers are looking for on your resume
5 mins | Travis O'Rourke | Article | Resumes & cover letters
When applying for jobs, it can be tricky to show that you’re the right person for the role, especially if you’re unsure of what the interviewer needs to know about you. However, you’ll stand a much better chance of impressing your potential manager or hiring party if you can offer concrete examples of soft skills that employers are looking for.
As opposed to technical skills, such as coding, these aren’t tied to any specific roles or industries and can be used across almost any position. As you’ll see from the examples, it’s likely that you’ll need and use these skills daily, even if you don’t realize it. Soft skills are growing in importance because, as innovation and technological advances are rapidly permeating different industries every day, it’s the soft skills that won’t become outdated so quickly - the key to enabling organizations to embrace change and future-proof themselves. Artificial intelligence can automate things like analyzing data, but it can’t lead a team.
Now that you know what soft skills are, it’s important to understand the difference between those and “hard skills”. Hard skills are tangible, quantifiable skills that make you qualified for a specific job. For example, having proficiency in several coding languages or knowledge of different CRM platforms can be hard skills. These manifest themselves as practical, technical things that can land you a job in your desired industry.
Why is this important? Because with hard skills, you can easily show your expertise in these fields through certifications, higher education, or in-depth conversations about those topics. Soft skills are more difficult to get across. How can you prove that you are a leader? How can you show a hiring manager that you’re a people person? This is why they’re different and why you may need to take a different approach to how you display them on your resume and in interviews.
Many people tend to just throw in their skills at the bottom of their resume with no context. Having a list of skills bulleted does nothing for the hiring manager. It’s much better to include your soft skills by showing them throughout your Employment History section.
This shows the reader how you were able to deliver success using your skills without explicitly mentioning them. This will help you stand out from other candidates because you'll have context to back it up before you get the interview.
Whether you’re sharing information between colleagues, or reporting to senior stakeholders, the ability to communicate well tops the list for many employers.
Showcasing communication on your resume:
Showcasing communication in an interview:
Just describing yourself as a “team player” won’t cut it. The hiring party will want to know how you’ll work with others, and how you can deliver the right results.
What to include in your resume:
How to showcase in an interview:
Can your next manager trust you to stay productive during challenging times? Or take charge of your responsibilities and learning?
Being thorough in your work tells your next employer that they can depend on you, as does the ability to spot any mistakes or catch things that others might have missed.
As mentioned in the introduction, today’s workers need to be able to adapt to change.
Emotional intelligence (often referred to as EQ), is “the level of your ability to understand other people, what motivates them and how to work cooperatively with them – while being mindful of your own emotions” – as defined by Howard Gardner, Harvard theorist.
Start looking for your next job and apply today.
Travis O'Rourke President of Hays Canada & CCO, Hays Americas
Travis is a Marketing graduate from Fanshawe College and was the 2023 recipient of their Distinguished Alumni Award. He joined Hays after holding various leadership roles elsewhere in the Canadian staffing industry. Travis setup and established Hays' outsourced talent solutions business and played an integral role in building Hays’ temporary and contract divisions throughout Canada. Initially joining Hays with a deep background in Technology, he holds extensive cross functional knowledge to provide clients with talent solutions in Financial Services, Energy, Mining, Manufacturing, Retail, and the Public Sector.