200+ Resume Action Verbs That Land Interviews
Strong resume bullets start with a strong verb. The verb does two jobs: it tells the reader what you actually did, and it signals ownership. "Responsible for" signals you were assigned a task. "Built" signals you made something happen. Same job, different reading.
Below is a list of 200+ action verbs grouped by what they signal. Pick the one that most accurately describes what you did — not the fanciest one in the list. Honest specificity beats thesaurus theatre.
Verbs that signal ownership and leadership
Verbs that signal you built or shipped something
Verbs that signal you improved something
Verbs that signal you analysed or decided
Verbs that signal you worked with others
Verbs that signal you sold or persuaded
Verbs that signal you managed money or resources
Verbs that signal you taught or wrote
Boring verbs to replace and what to use instead
Some verbs flatten your bullets even when the work behind them was strong. Replace them.
- "Helped" → Supported, Enabled, Contributed to (only if the bullet quantifies your specific role)
- "Worked on" → Built, Shipped, Designed, Owned, Led (pick what is actually true)
- "Responsible for" → Owned, Led, Managed, Directed
- "Assisted with" → Supported, Contributed to — and ideally use a more specific verb that describes what you did
- "Participated in" → Contributed, Co-built, Co-led — only with a specific description of your role
- "Made" → Built, Designed, Created, Drafted, Authored, Generated
- "Did" → Almost always replace with something more specific
- "Handled" → Owned, Managed, Resolved, Coordinated
Before and after
Weak: Helped improve the customer onboarding process.
Strong: Redesigned the customer onboarding flow, reducing time-to-first-value from 7 days to 2 and lifting D30 retention 14%.
Weak: Responsible for marketing campaigns.
Strong: Owned a $1.4M paid acquisition budget; cut blended CAC 28% while doubling lead volume in 12 months.
Weak: Worked on data pipelines.
Strong: Built five production Airflow data pipelines processing 80M events daily; reduced data-quality incidents by 70%.
The one rule that beats every verb list
The right verb is the one that is honestly specific to what you did. A bullet that uses "Spearheaded" for work where you contributed mid-stream reads worse than one that uses "Co-built" honestly. Recruiters read hundreds of resumes a week — they can smell verb inflation. Be accurate, be specific, and pick the verb that matches the work.
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