When Was the Last Time You Updated Your Nurse Resume?
- NursePathwaysPro
- Jun 16
- 2 min read

Nursing careers don’t stay still — and neither should your resume.
Whether you're actively applying or simply keeping your career options open, staying on top of your nursing resume helps you track your growth, highlight your evolving skillset, and position yourself for leadership roles or specialty shifts.
This is your reminder: Never stop leveling up.
Start With Your Last Quarter
Ask yourself: What have I accomplished in the last 90 days?
Look back at both professional and personal growth. Think about:
Certifications or CEUs you completed
Projects you managed
Committees or workgroups you joined
Cross-training or new specialties you explored
Speaking engagements or presentations
Awards, recognitions, or shout-outs
Pro tip: Check your LinkedIn posts, emails, work calendar, even your phone photos. You may have documented milestones without even realizing it. Clock it. Capture it.
Highlight Partnerships & Collaborations
Nursing doesn’t happen in a silo. Your resume should reflect the teams you’ve worked with and the multidisciplinary relationships you've built. These partnerships show leadership, communication skills, and your ability to collaborate across departments.
Clinical teams
Behavioral health integration
Care coordination with case managers or social workers
Community health initiatives
School-based health partnerships
QI or policy workgroups
Document Projects You Led or Supported
Leadership isn’t always about your job title — it’s about impact.Make sure your resume reflects:
Quality improvement initiatives
New workflows or protocols you helped design
EMR transitions you supported
Policy development or staff training
Nurse mentorship or precepting roles
Every project you’ve touched is a reflection of your ability to drive change and lead.
Review & Refresh Your Resume Headings
Are your current resume headers still working for you? As your career evolves, so should your resume sections. Consider adding or updating:
Clinical Leadership
Project Management
Care Coordination & Collaboration
Policy Development
Quality & Safety Initiatives
Community Health Partnerships
Behavioral Health Integration
Pro tip: Don’t be afraid to customize your headers based on the job you're targeting.
Translate Your Job Titles for New Opportunities
Your job title at your current organization may not always match industry norms. When applying for roles outside of your current system (or outside of traditional bedside), make sure your titles are easily understood by recruiters, HR, and Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS).
For example:
“Nurse Manager, School-Based Health Services” → “Outpatient Nurse Manager, Pediatric Community Health”
“Health Center Advisor” → “Healthcare Program Manager, Federal Grants & Partnerships”
Translation = Visibility.
Keep It Moving And Keep It Current
Even if you're not actively job hunting today, your resume is a living document.Update it quarterly. Build a "brag file" to track wins.Stay ready — so when opportunity knocks, you're not scrambling.
Just My Nursing Perspective
Your career grows faster when your resume keeps up. Nurse leadership happens long before your title catches up. Small wins add up. Don’t downplay them.
“You’re not starting from scratch—you’re building from experience.”
Nurse Meg | NursePathwaysPro
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