Why action verbs make or break your resume
Most resume bullet points start with weak, passive phrasing: "Responsible for managing a team," "Helped with product launches," "Worked on improving customer satisfaction." These phrases bury the impact.
The fix is starting every bullet with a strong action verb that immediately communicates what you did and what you owned. Recruiters spend an average of 7 seconds on a first resume scan. Action verbs pull them in. Weak phrases lose them.
Words to cut from your resume today
These phrases actively hurt your resume — they're either overused, too passive, or filler. Cut them entirely:
"Responsible for" / "Helped with" / "Assisted with" / "Worked on" / "Involved in" / "Participated in"
Also cut these soft-skill clichés: "Hard-working" / "Detail-oriented" / "Team player" / "Go-getter" / "Think outside the box" / "Synergy" / "Passionate about" / "Results-driven" / "Dynamic" / "Proven track record" / "Strong communication skills"
Replace with a specific verb plus a specific result. "Responsible for managing budgets" becomes "Managed $4M annual operating budget, reducing variance to less than 2%."
Management, leadership and technical action verbs
Directing & Overseeing: Administered, Chaired, Commanded, Controlled, Coordinated, Delegated, Directed, Executed, Governed, Headed, Led, Managed, Operated, Orchestrated, Oversaw, Presided, Ran, Spearheaded, Supervised.
Building & Establishing: Built, Chartered, Conceived, Created, Cultivated, Developed, Established, Founded, Grew, Hired, Initiated, Launched, Pioneered, Recruited, Scaled, Structured.
Improving & Transforming: Consolidated, Modernized, Overhauled, Redesigned, Reorganized, Restructured, Revamped, Streamlined, Transformed, Turned around.
Coaching & Developing: Coached, Counseled, Guided, Mentored, Motivated, Nurtured, Onboarded, Trained, Empowered, Inspired.
Technical & Engineering: Architected, Automated, Built, Deployed, Designed, Developed, Engineered, Implemented, Migrated, Optimized, Programmed, Refactored, Scaled, Simplified, Upgraded.
Sales, analytical and communication action verbs
Sales & Revenue: Acquired, Amplified, Boosted, Closed, Converted, Drove, Exceeded, Expanded, Generated, Grew, Landed, Maximized, Negotiated, Secured, Sold, Surpassed, Upsold, Won.
Analytical & Data: Analyzed, Assessed, Audited, Calculated, Diagnosed, Evaluated, Forecasted, Identified, Measured, Modeled, Quantified, Synthesized, Visualized.
Communication & Stakeholder: Advocated, Briefed, Convinced, Educated, Facilitated, Influenced, Negotiated, Persuaded, Pitched, Presented, Proposed, Recommended.
Project & Operations: Budgeted, Completed, Delivered, Executed, Facilitated, Launched, Monitored, Prioritized, Produced, Shipped, Tracked.
How to use these verbs effectively
A strong verb alone isn't enough — pair it with a metric or tangible outcome. The formula: [Action Verb] + [What] + [Result/Scale].
"Responsible for managing a team" → "Led a team of 12 engineers across 3 time zones."
"Helped improve customer retention" → "Reduced churn from 18% to 11% by launching a proactive health score program."
"Worked on sales" → "Closed $2.4M in new ARR, exceeding quota by 34%."
Two practical rules: use present tense for your current role (Lead, Manage, Build) and past tense for all previous roles (Led, Managed, Built). And don't repeat the same verb more than twice per page — rotate through the categories above to keep bullet points varied.