The skills section of your CV is one of its most important elements for two reasons: it's one of the first things a recruiter's eye lands on, and it's what ATS systems use to score your relevance to the job description. A well-written skills section can make the difference between passing or failing the initial screen.
Hard skills (technical skills) are specific, learnable abilities that can be measured and verified: Python programming, Adobe Photoshop, financial modelling, surgical technique, fluency in French. These are the most important skills to include on your CV.
Soft skills (interpersonal skills) are general personality traits and ways of working: communication, leadership, adaptability, problem-solving. These matter but are harder to prove โ and every candidate claims them. Handle soft skills carefully.
The most effective skills section format is a clean list of skills, either as comma-separated values, tags/chips, or a brief bulleted list. Don't use skill bars or percentage ratings โ "Python: 80%" is meaningless and unprofessional.
8โ15 skills is the ideal range. Fewer than 8 looks sparse; more than 15 starts to look like keyword stuffing. Quality beats quantity โ every skill you list should be something you're genuinely proficient in and would be comfortable demonstrating.
The authenticity rule: Only list skills you actually have. If you claim proficiency in a software tool and the interviewer asks you to demonstrate it, you need to be able to. Exaggerated skills are found out quickly.
The most powerful thing you can do with your skills section is tailor it for each application. Read the job description carefully, identify every hard skill mentioned (required and preferred), and make sure each one that applies to you appears in your skills section โ in exactly the same wording as the job description.
Listing "Microsoft Office" as a skill in 2025 is the equivalent of listing "can use a telephone." Everyone can use Word and Excel at a basic level. Only include Microsoft skills if you have advanced proficiency in a specific application that's relevant to the role โ "Excel (Advanced: VBA, Power Query, complex financial modelling)" is genuinely useful.
Rather than listing "strong communicator" in your skills section, demonstrate communication skills through your bullet points ("Presented quarterly results to a board of 12 directors") or your personal statement. If you do include soft skills, be specific: "Cross-cultural team leadership (teams across UK, India and UAE)" is meaningful; "good with people" is not.
Our free CV generator has a dedicated skills section where you can add technical and soft skills as individual tags. They render as clean, professional skill chips in your finished CV โ no formatting hassle required.
Always list language skills separately from your technical skills section โ they deserve their own section. Include the language and your proficiency level. Even basic proficiency in a relevant language is worth mentioning, particularly for international roles.
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