
Taylor
Balanced two-column template for business, HR, project, and mid-career resumes.
Use for PM resumeResume templates for project managers who need to show projects, budgets, timelines, teams, and results clearly.
Start with what the job asks for first: project results, team size, budget, certifications, tools, or a simple work timeline.
Use Taylor, Harbor, or Stonebridge when projects, teams, timelines, and results all need room on the page.
Use Skill Track when certifications, tools, industries, and strengths need to be easy to find.
Use Pemberton, Portugal, or Classic when applying through company portals or formal employers.
Taylor
Balanced PM default
Good when projects, skills, and experience all need equal space.
Harbor
Leadership and stakeholder work
Good for leadership, vendors, clients, and work across teams.
Stonebridge
Formal delivery roles
Professional style for project, program, and operations applications.
Skill Track
Certifications and tools
Useful when PMP, Agile, Scrum, Jira, budgets, or industries should stand out.
Pemberton
Professional PMO applications
Clean structure for corporate, healthcare, operations, and regulated teams.
Classic
Safest simple option
Straightforward one-column layout for formal portals and broad project applications.

Balanced two-column template for business, HR, project, and mid-career resumes.
Use for PM resume
Refined two-column template for leadership resumes with strategy, scope, and results.
Use for PM resume
Serif-led two-column template for polished, trust-heavy professional applications.
Use for PM resume
Skills-forward two-column template for consultants, specialists, and career changers.
Use for PM resume
Quiet ATS-friendly template for healthcare, law, operations, and other structured fields.
Use for PM resume
Spacious single-column template for premium, consulting, and senior professional profiles.
Use for PM resume
Straightforward ATS-first template for broad professional, operational, and career-change resumes.
Use for PM resumeMake it easy to see what you managed and what changed.
Project manager resumes can become hard to read when they include too much process language. Use the template to organize projects, budgets, timelines, teams, vendors, risks, and results.
Do
Show the project size, budget, timeline, team size, and result when you can.
Don't
Rely only on Agile, Scrum, PMP, or PMO labels. Explain what you delivered or improved.
Quick FAQ
It should make project size, ownership, timelines, budgets, teams, risks, and results easy to scan.
Add budget, timeline, team size, stakeholder groups, vendor scope, launch size, adoption, savings, speed, risk reduction, or process improvement wherever possible.