How to tailor your CV to a job description (with examples)

By The Forte Team · · 4 min read

CV tailoringjob applications

Sending the same CV to every role is the most common reason good candidates get filtered out. Not because the CV is bad — because it is generic. A recruiter scanning 200 applications is looking for evidence that you fit this role, and a one-size-fits-all CV makes them do the work of figuring that out. Most won't.

Tailoring fixes this. Done well, it isn't about gaming an applicant tracking system or stuffing in keywords — it's about surfacing the relevant truth about your experience so the match is obvious in six seconds. Here's how to do it properly.

Read the job ad like a recruiter, not a candidate

Before you touch your CV, read the advert twice and pull out three things:

  • Must-haves — the requirements repeated, listed first, or phrased as "essential". These are non-negotiable; your CV has to evidence them.
  • The language they use — do they say "stakeholder management" or "working with clients"? "Data analysis" or "reporting"? You'll mirror their phrasing, because that's the language the hiring manager is already thinking in.
  • The real problem — most ads describe a job; the good ones hint at a problem they need solved. A role asking for "someone to bring structure to a fast-growing team" is telling you what success looks like. Speak to that.

Write these down. They become your checklist for the rest of the edit.

Mirror their language — honestly

If the ad asks for "competency in project delivery" and your CV says "ran projects", change it to "project delivery". Same truth, their words. This isn't keyword-stuffing; it's removing the translation step so the reader doesn't have to guess that your experience matches.

The honesty line matters: only mirror language you can actually back up. If you can't evidence it, don't claim it — a tailored CV that overpromises gets exposed in the interview.

Reorder for relevance

Recruiters read top-to-bottom and rarely reach the end. So the most relevant evidence has to be near the top:

  • Lead your personal statement with the competency the role centres on.
  • Within each job, reorder bullet points so the ones matching the ad come first.
  • If a past role is highly relevant, give it more space; trim the ones that aren't.

You're not hiding anything — you're putting the most decision-useful information where it gets read.

Quantify the bullets that matter

"Responsible for managing the budget" tells a recruiter nothing. "Managed a £400k budget, coming in 8% under for two years running" tells them scale and outcome. You don't need numbers on every line — pick the three or four bullets closest to the job's must-haves and make them concrete: scale, outcome, timeframe.

A quick before/after

Generic: "Experienced marketer with a track record of successful campaigns."

Tailored to a role asking for B2B demand generation: "B2B demand-generation marketer; built a lead pipeline that grew qualified enquiries 60% in 12 months across email and paid search."

Same person. The second one answers the ad's actual question.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Keyword-stuffing. Dumping the ad's terms into a white-text block or a skills soup reads as desperate and trips modern filters. Mirror language inside real achievements.
  • Tailoring only the top. A bespoke personal statement on top of an untouched generic CV is obvious. Tailor throughout.
  • Losing your through-line. Tailoring isn't reinventing yourself per application — it's choosing which true parts of you to foreground.

The five-minute tailoring checklist

  1. Pulled the must-haves and the ad's exact language?
  2. Personal statement leads with the role's core competency?
  3. Top three bullets evidence the must-haves, in their words?
  4. Most relevant role and bullets reordered to the top?
  5. Three to four bullets quantified with scale and outcome?

Tailoring every application by hand is slow, and it's the bit most people skip when they're applying to twenty roles. That's exactly the problem Forte was built for: it reads your CV, works out the competencies you can genuinely evidence, matches them to live roles, and drafts a tailored CV and covering letter for each one — so the relevant truth is surfaced for you.

Find Your Forte and see where your strengths actually lead.