// construction resume guide · 2025

The Construction Manager resume guide.

Everything a construction manager needs to clear the ATS, get the recruiter's 6-second scan, and land the interview — examples, keywords, and the exact phrases hiring managers in construction want to see.

12 min read · last updated 2025

// the problem

Why most construction managers resumes get filtered out before a human sees them.

Here's the hard truth: 75% of resumes for construction roles never reach a human. They die in an Applicant Tracking System (ATS) — Workday, Greenhouse, Lever, Taleo — that's looking for specific keywords, structure, and signals. Construction Managers get filtered for three reasons, over and over:

  • Reason 1

    Projects listed without budget or schedule data

  • Reason 2

    Missing safety and PM software keywords

  • Reason 3

    No on-time / on-budget delivery metrics

Fix those three, and you're already ahead of 80% of the applicant pool. The rest of this guide tells you exactly how.

// structure

The 5-section resume structure that works for construction managers.

ATS systems parse top-to-bottom. Recruiters scan in the same order. Use this exact structure — no creative reorderings, no two-column layouts (they break ATS parsing completely).

01

Header

Name, city/state, phone, email, LinkedIn URL. No photo, no graphics, no fancy fonts. ATS systems can't read images and most will reject the whole document.

02

Professional summary

3-4 lines, written for the specific role. Lead with your strongest credential as a construction manager (years of experience, top employer, biggest win). Mirror the job title from the JD.

03

Experience

Reverse chronological. Each role: company, title, dates (MM/YYYY), then 4-6 bullets. Each bullet starts with a strong verb and contains a number. We'll show examples below.

04

Skills

A flat list of the technical and tool keywords for construction manager roles. NOT a graphic with star ratings. Plain text, comma-separated, in the order the JD lists them.

05

Education + certifications

Degree, school, year. Then any role-relevant certifications — these are often hard ATS filters in construction.

// keywords

The 10 keywords that matter most for construction managers.

We scraped thousands of construction manager job descriptions across LinkedIn, Indeed, and Greenhouse to find the keywords that appear most often. If you have real experience with these, they belong in your resume — verbatim, in your bullets and skills section. Don't paraphrase ("worked with relational databases" → write "PostgreSQL").

ProcoreOSHA 30schedulingsubcontractor managementRFIblueprint readingbudget managementsafety complianceP6 PrimaveraLEED

⚠️ Don't keyword-stuff. ATS systems flag obvious keyword density. The trick is weaving them into bullets that show real impact — exactly what RewriteHire does automatically.

// before & after

The same bullet, before and after rewriting.

This is the difference between a resume that gets filtered and one that gets a recruiter screen. Same role, same person — totally different signal.

Before — generic

Managed construction projects and coordinated trades.

41/100 ATS score

After — tailored for Senior Construction Manager at Turner

Delivered $42M mixed-use build on Procore + P6; finished 3 weeks early, 4% under budget, 0 OSHA recordables across 18 subs and 320k sf.

94/100 ATS score

Why the second one wins

  • → Specific scope (numbers, scale, technologies named)
  • → Strong action verb at the start
  • → Quantified outcome — not just activity
  • → Mirrors the exact keywords construction ATS systems weight

// what to cut

7 mistakes that kill construction manager resumes.

  1. 01

    "Responsible for…" — Cut every instance. Lead with verbs that show action: built, shipped, scaled, owned, drove.

  2. 02

    Skills as graphics or star ratings. ATS reads them as zero. Plain text only.

  3. 03

    Two-column layouts. Most ATS systems read column 1 top-to-bottom, then column 2 — your bullets get scrambled.

  4. 04

    Generic objective statements ("Seeking a challenging role…"). Replace with a 3-line summary tailored to the JD.

  5. 05

    Listing every job back to college. Cap at 10-15 years for senior roles, less for junior.

  6. 06

    No metrics. If a bullet has no number, it has no weight. Add headcount, dollars, percentages, or scale.

  7. 07

    One resume for every job. ATS scoring is JD-specific. Tailor or watch your match score plummet.

// numbers that matter

The numbers construction hiring managers actually look for.

A bullet without a number is a bullet without weight. Here's what to quantify on a construction manager resume:

  • Project value ($ budget, sf, units)
  • Schedule (% on-time, days early)
  • Safety (OSHA recordables, incident rate)
  • Dollar amounts (revenue, budget, savings, deal size)
  • Percentages (improvement, growth, error reduction, attainment)
  • Volume / scale (users served, tickets handled, transactions, requests/day)
  • Team size (people led, cross-functional partners, vendors managed)
  • Time saved or cycle reductions (close from 9d→5d, deploy from 24m→4m)

// summary section

How to write a construction manager resume summary that gets read.

Recruiters spend 6 seconds on the first scan. Your summary is the only paragraph they actually read. Use this 3-line formula:

Template

Line 1: [Title] with [X years] in [industry/specialty].
Line 2: Built/shipped/led [biggest measurable win].
Line 3: Looking for [type of role] where I can [outcome they care about].

Example — Senior Construction Manager at Turner

Construction Manager with [X] years in construction. Delivered $42M mixed-use build on Procore + P6; finished 3 weeks early, 4% under budget, 0 OSHA recordables across 18 subs and 320k sf. Looking for a construction manager role where I can drive measurable impact on [outcome they care about].

// see your real ATS score

Test your construction manager resume in 30 seconds.

Paste your resume + a real construction manager JD. We'll show your ATS score, which keywords you're missing, and what to fix — free, no signup.