Finance Resume Builder
Finance Resume Builder
Write bullets that translate deals, models, and analysis into the language finance leaders actually want to read.
Finance resumes fail when they bury business impact under jargon or list responsibilities that every analyst shares. Whether you closed a $500M acquisition, built a three-statement model, or reconciled month-end close, the difference between a strong bullet and a weak one is how clearly you connect your work to dollars, decisions, or risk.
Resuvia's finance resume builder gives you role-specific writing guidance for investment banking, corporate finance, FP&A, accounting, and advisory roles—plus before-and-after bullet rewrites that show you exactly how to frame valuation work, cost savings, process improvements, and stakeholder communication. Every resume is checked with the same free ATS match-score tool.
FAQ
- How do I write about financial modeling without it sounding like a task list?
- Shift from describing the model itself to what the model enabled. Instead of 'Built a DCF model to value acquisition targets,' write 'Valued 12 acquisition targets using DCF analysis, supporting $200M in closed deals.' The model is the method; the decision or outcome is the achievement.
- Should I include every deal or project I touched, or only the ones I led?
- Include deals where you owned meaningful work, even if you weren't the lead. A junior analyst who ran comps and built the pitch deck contributed differently than the VP who negotiated terms, but both can claim the deal. Be specific about your role: 'Conducted comparable company analysis for $400M merger' is honest and compelling.
- How do I write about cost savings or efficiency improvements without sounding vague?
- Anchor savings to a time frame and a process. 'Reduced month-end close time from 12 days to 8 days by automating journal entries' is stronger than 'Improved efficiency of close process.' If you can't quantify the dollar savings, quantify the time, error rate, or manual steps eliminated.