The 9 most common resume gaps

Which gaps matter most before applying

Not all gaps carry equal weight. ATS layout risks and missing measurable impact tend to matter most — one affects whether your resume is read at all, the other affects how convincing it is once it's in front of a person. An unclear target role is close behind, since it affects whether a recruiter even understands what to evaluate you for.

Example

A candidate's resume checker flags four gaps: missing measurable impact, generic wording, a weak summary, and one ATS layout risk (a two-column skills sidebar). Fixing the layout and adding two or three real metrics to the strongest bullets takes 30 minutes and addresses the two highest-impact gaps — the wording and summary can be polished afterward.

How to prioritize fixes

  1. Fix ATS layout risks first — they can prevent your content from being read correctly at all.
  2. Add measurable impact to your most recent and most relevant bullets next.
  3. Address missing keywords and unsupported skills together, using only real experience.
  4. Polish wording and summary last — valuable, but lower-impact than the structural fixes above.

What not to fake

Every one of these gaps has a truthful fix. None of them should be closed by inventing something that isn't real:

How GenioPrep groups score gaps into priority fixes

GenioPrep's resume score doesn't just list problems — it groups the gaps it finds into a prioritized fix list, ordered by impact on your overall score, so you know which one or two changes are worth making first instead of facing an undifferentiated list of everything that could be better.

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Safety & trust note

Resume gaps should be fixed by clarifying real experience, not by adding skills, numbers, or responsibilities that are not true.

See our guide to improving resume bullets for the bullet-level fixes, and our Privacy Policy for how your resume content is handled.