Hard skills to list on a Project Manager resume
These are the technical skills that should appear in your Skills section AND inside at least one bullet point each: Project planning, Risk register management, Budget tracking, Resource forecasting, Agile / Scrum / Kanban, and Earned-value management. Listing them only in the Skills section is a weak signal; an ATS scoring algorithm gives more weight to a skill that also appears in your work-history bullets.
Tools and platforms Project Manager resumes should mention
Project Manager JDs in 2026 typically expect literacy in: MS Project, Jira, Smartsheet, Asana, Monday, and Confluence. Note: brand names beat categories. "Snowflake" beats "data warehouse", "Figma" beats "design tool", "Datadog" beats "monitoring". Lift the specific brand from the JD.
Soft skills worth mentioning for a Project Manager
Most "soft skills" are filler ("team player", "communication"). The ones that actually carry weight for Project Manager candidates are: Status-report synthesis and Vendor negotiation. Pair each one with a concrete behaviour or outcome — never list them on their own.
Action verbs that work on Project Manager bullets
Strong Project Manager bullets start with one of: Built, Owned, Shipped, Led, Scaled, Migrated, Cut, Lifted, Designed, Automated, Reduced, and Authored. Weak openers ("Responsible for", "Worked on", "Helped with") flatten ownership. Replace every "Helped with" or "Responsible for" with a specific verb that names the action.
Bad keywords to avoid on a Project Manager resume
Skip: "rockstar", "ninja", "guru", "10x developer", and any noun that is not also in your job title. Skip outdated tools (e.g. AngularJS in 2026, jQuery for new Project Manager roles). Skip soft-skill claims with no behaviour attached. Each of these signals junior or out-of-touch to senior recruiters.
Example Project Manager bullets that use these keywords well
Strong: • Led a 14-month $2.4M ERP migration across 7 business units; landed on time, 6% under budget, with zero P1 cut-over incidents. • Built a portfolio dashboard tracking 23 concurrent projects; surfaced 9 schedule risks early enough to recover all of them.
What makes them work: each bullet contains 2-3 of the keywords from the lists above, an action verb, and a quantified outcome — exactly what an ATS scorer is built to reward.
How TryApplyNow finds the right keywords for any JD
Upload your resume, compare it to a job description, improve your match score, and track your applications. The keyword checker reads any Project Manager job description, extracts the ATS-relevant keywords, and tells you which ones are missing from your current resume. You can then add them in the right context — not just stuff them into a list.
Where to place Project Manager keywords on the page
Three high-weight zones, in priority order. (1) The headline / summary at the top of the resume — a parser reads this first and an ATS often weights it 2-3× more than the body. Include the exact Project Manager title and your top hard skill. (2) The most recent role's bullets — these are weighted heavier than older roles. Each bullet should mention a tool or hard skill from the JD, not just an outcome. (3) The Skills section — list every keyword you can support with evidence elsewhere in the resume. Skills you list but never demonstrate in a bullet still count for parsing, but a recruiter scanning manually will discount them. The 80/20 here: if you fix only the headline + the top three bullets of your most recent role, you cover most of the ATS scoring weight.