Professional Summary builder – Instructions
Turn your story into a Professional Summary
A Professional Summary is a short paragraph at the top of your résumé. In 2–3 sentences, it answers: Who are you as a worker? What strengths do you bring? What kind of work are you looking for?
From long story to short summary
In earlier milestones, you wrote your employability story and STAR barrier stories. Now we will compress that rich story into a short, clear summary that a recruiter can read in a few seconds.
Before – Long story (shortened example)
“I started helping neighbours with forms and phone calls in my community. Later I volunteered at a local clinic, where I organised patient files and explained information in simple language. Now I work in a shop and support customers every day, but I want to move into an office job where I can use my communication and organising skills.”
After – Professional Summary (résumé-ready)
Customer support and office administration worker with experience helping community members, clinic visitors, and shop customers. Organised records, explained information in clear language, and supported people calmly during busy times. Interested in roles where I can use my communication and organising skills in an office or customer service environment.
Notice how the summary keeps the best parts of the story: experience, transferable skills, and the type of work they want.
Three questions your summary should answer
- Who are you as a worker? (field / role – for example, customer support, office admin, junior IT support)
- What experience and skills do you bring? (transferable skills, tools, languages)
- What kind of work are you looking for? (the environment or type of role where you can add value)
Sentence frames you can use
You can start your Professional Summary with one of these frames. Choose 2–3 sentences.
- “I am a [role] with experience in [type of work / setting].”
- “I have [X] years of experience supporting [customers / clients / teams] in [field].”
- “My strengths include [skill 1], [skill 2], and [skill 3].”
- “I am interested in roles where I can [do what?] and [support whom?].”
Example (Level A):
“I am a customer support and office worker with experience helping customers in shops and clinics. My strengths include clear communication, organising information, and staying calm with many requests. I am interested in roles where I can support customers and teams in an office or service environment.”
Helpful strength words (choose 2–4)
You can use these words to describe how you work. Choose the ones that are true for you:
organized · reliable · adaptable · calm under pressure · detail-oriented · supportive · proactive · resilient
Example (with resilience language):
“Resilient customer support and office administration professional with 4+ years of experience helping customers in telecom and community settings. Known for clear communication, proactive follow-up, and staying calm under pressure. Interested in roles where I can support teams and improve daily processes.”
In the next unit, you will write your own 2–3 sentence Professional Summary as an assignment. You can come back to this page any time to look at the examples and sentence frames.
When you are ready, click Next to open the “Professional Summary – First Draft” assignment.