Resume & ATS · 2 min read
The ultimate resume guide for B2B SaaS sales
Everything you need to build a resume that passes ATS and impresses hiring managers.
HuntForTomorrow Editorial · Career Content Team
Published 24/6/2026 · Reviewed 24/6/2026
Expertise: resumes, interviews, job search
TL;DR
Use a clean one-page format, quantify achievements, and mirror keywords from target job descriptions.
Quick answer
Focus on quota attainment, pipeline metrics, and SaaS-specific skills in a scannable one-page resume.
Key facts
Format
Reverse-chronological PDF
Length
One page (two only if every line is high-impact)
ATS signal
Standard headings + JD keywords in context
Update cadence
Refresh summary and top bullets weekly during active search
Your resume is the first filter between you and a B2B SaaS interview. Applicant tracking systems scan for keywords and structure before a human ever sees your profile. Experienced sellers who treat the resume as a marketing document—not a career autobiography—consistently earn more callbacks.
Structure that passes ATS and humans
Lead with a tight professional summary: role, domain, years of experience, and one quantified highlight. Follow with reverse-chronological experience, a skills block aligned to your target JD, and education only if it adds signal.
Use standard section headings—Experience, Skills, Education—so parsers map fields correctly. Avoid tables, text boxes, and graphics that break linear text extraction.
- One page for most candidates under 15 years of experience
- Bold company names and dates; keep bullets to 2–4 per role
- Export as PDF with selectable text, not a scanned image
Bullets that prove revenue impact
Every bullet should answer: what did you sell, to whom, and what changed because of you? Replace duties with outcomes. Hiring managers scan for quota %, deal size, cycle time, and expansion revenue.
Mirror language from target job posts: pipeline, ARR, MEDDIC, outbound, multi-threading, and CRM tools you actually used. Keywords in context beat keyword dumps.
Tailoring without rewriting from scratch
Maintain a master CV with your full history, then create role-specific versions by adjusting the summary, reordering top bullets, and swapping skills to match each JD. Aim for 8–12 truthful keywords per application.
Track which versions you send. When a recruiter calls, you should know exactly which narrative they read.
Common pitfalls for experienced sellers
Cut early-career detail that does not support your target AE or leadership role. Remove generic soft-skill bullets with no metric. Do not list every tool you touched—prioritize those in the job description.
- Vague bullets like "managed key accounts" without ARR or retention
- Two pages filled with low-impact history
- Summary paragraphs that read like a job description
For deeper walkthroughs on ATS formatting, keywords, and summary examples, explore the related resume guides in our Knowledge Hub.
Summary
Everything you need to build a resume that passes ATS and impresses hiring managers.