🎁 Free Middle-Market PE Résumé Template

Standout Private Equity Resume: Free Template & 2025 Guide

Your PE Resume Isn’t a Resume. It’s an Investment Memo.

Let’s be real – your private equity resume will be judged by someone who’s probably three coffees deep and has seen more PDFs than that sketchy free textbook site. That person holds your destiny, and no, they don’t care about your “passion for finance.” They care about one thing: can you make them money? (Or at least not make them look bad, if they’re a headhunter).

In six seconds, that single page has to prove you can think like an investor. It must quantify your impact, showcase your modeling skills, and signal that you understand the game. The key is simple: limit filler, lean on hard numbers, and keep that baby clean. Do that, and you’re 90% of the way there. This guide, and the included free template, are built to handle the other 10%.

For your highest probability chance at landing a PE role, I highly recommend reading about Middle-Market Private Equity Careers.

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Middle-Market at a Glance

TierEnterprise ValueTypical Fund Size
LMM$25–100 mm< $500 mm
Core MM$100–500 mm$500 mm–$1.5 B
UMM$500 mm–$1 B$1.5–5 B

Nearly 7 out of 10 PE buyouts now happen in this $25 mm – $1 B range.

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This is part of a bigger series for aspiring private equity professionals. I’ll cover resumes, LBO modeling, interview prep, and more that’s all based on real-world deal experience.

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Build a Private Equity Resume That Actually Gets Interviews

Annotated private equity resume template showing contact information, investor-focused deal bullet, quantified impact metrics, tailored sector experience, PE-relevant skills, and 1-page layout

Resume Structure: What Every Buy-Side Resume Needs

Since PE hiring managers / headhunters spend just a few seconds on an initial resume scan, your goal is to immediately signal your “investor mindset”. Here are some key things they’re looking for:

  • Analytical Prowess: Your resume shows some type of financial expertise – think corporate finance, valuation, and accounting skills. Highlight experience with financial models (DCF, LBO, 3-statement) and analysis. Show you speak the language of numbers and deals. (PE firms feel some type of way seeing “DCF valuation” or “built a 3-statement model” on a resume like banking.)
  • Deal Experience (or Proxies): Likely the first item a reviewer scans for (cause deals, ya know?). Showcase any experience related to M&A, diligence, or strategic financial projects with specifics (deal size, your role, outcome). No formal deal experience? Use what I like to call “proxies”: frame your projects as investments. The standard “deal layout” resume used throughout front-office finance is critical.

    – For example, a market expansion project could be: “Analyzed market expansion as a $50M growth investment, projecting 20% ROI.”

    – The key is to show you understand evaluating opportunities and driving results. (Remember our Ultimate Guide’s advice on spinning even minor involvement.) Quantify results.

  • Investor Thinking: PE firms want people who think like investors, not just task-doers. Your resume should reflect critical thinking and judgment (hopefully your human form does too). Emphasize instances where you assessed a business, made strategic recommendations, or considered ROI, risks, and strategic fit.

    – Phrases like “evaluated viability of X”, “identified key drivers of Y”, or “recommended strategy to improve Z” signal this insight.

    – Showing an “investor mindset” could be as simple as highlighting that you considered ROI, risks, or strategic fit in a project you worked on.

  • Professional Polish: In private equity, attention to detail and polish are non-negotiable. PE professionals expect clean, error-free resumes that look professionally formatted. Why? Because a polished resume suggests you have high standards (something you’ll need when putting together investment memos or board presentations – and hopefully your dating life).

    – Make sure your formatting is consistent, spacing is balanced, and there are no typos. Also, tone matters – it should be confident and professional.

    – Avoid casual slang or anything too personal on the resume. Show some personality in your interests section, sure, but overall it should read as a sharp professional document. (We’ll cover specific formatting must-do’s and what to avoid later.)

  • Intent and Narrative: A great PE resume doesn’t just list experience; it tells a story of your intent. A recruiter should quickly grasp why you’re aiming for private equity and how your path – however non-traditional – actually makes sense for a PE role.

    – This is where the “career narrative” comes in. Every role and achievement listed should, in some way, build the case that you’re made for PE.

    – Show deliberate intent. If you made a pivot (like I did from a hedge fund to investment banking to pursue PE), use your resume bullets to connect the dots.

Personal Example Box

Personal Example: How I Framed My Non-Traditional Journey

My path into PE was anything but a straight line. I started at a hedge fund, knowing I wanted to be on the buy-side, but quickly realized I was passionate about owning companies, not just trading stocks. The problem? I had to convince an investment bank—the gatekeeper to PE—that a public markets guy was worth hiring.

My resume couldn’t just be a list of past jobs; it had to tell a deliberate story. Here was the game plan:

  1. I “Deal-ified” My Hedge Fund Work. I didn’t just list stocks I covered. I framed each investment thesis as a mini-LBO, focusing relentlessly on the same analytical and valuation skills a banker would use. I was showing them I already thought like a dealmaker.

  2. I Was Brutally Honest About the Pivot. When I landed the banking role, my resume explicitly stated I took the job—with its tougher hours and initial pay cut—specifically to gain the M&A experience vital for a long-term career in private equity. This eliminated any questions about my commitment.

  3. I Emphasized What Mattered for the Next Role. When applying to PE, my resume became laser-focused. Roughly 80% of the real estate was dedicated to my M&A deals. My hedge fund start was still there, but it was positioned as the analytical foundation that made me a better investor, not the main event.

The lesson is simple: you have to connect the dots for the reader. My resume turned an “unconventional” path into a compelling narrative of focus and determination.

Let’s say you started in engineering – you might highlight how you learned to analyze complex problems (analytical rigor) and led cost-saving projects (operational improvement, which PE firms value in portfolio companies). Then you got an MBA or started investing on the side – showing your growing investor mindset and commitment to finance. By the time a PE firm looks at your resume, it should feel like each step was intentionally building toward a career in investing.

A winning Private Equity resume needs a clear, logical structure. To really stand out, your resume must attempt to convey an investor’s mindset by showing you understand value creation conceptually. For an example of deeper items they may be looking for, see our post on the 3 core levers of PE returns.

Core Private Equity Resume Sections and What They Should Include

Before you dive into writing, make sure your resume meets these must-haves that PE recruiters expect:

Checklist of private equity resume must-haves including deal bullets, investor language, and ATS-friendly formatting.

Contact Information

Full Name (large, bold), Phone, Professional Email, Customized LinkedIn Profile URL, City/State.

Education

*Note: If you are applying for PE analyst roles or do not have any significant full-time experience, put education first. However, if you are applying for PE Associate roles and / or have 6+ months of “deal experience” from internships or full-time roles, I highly recommend putting Education at the bottom of your resume as in the template. The Professional Experience section will likely be more of a differentiator unless you have something amazing to show off school-wise besides a (likely overpriced) school name.

  • School, Degree, Honors: (e.g., B.S. in Finance, University of School at City, Magna Cum Laude) – Make sure to include scholarships if any.
  • GPA: Definitively include if it’s solid (generally >3.4/4.0 for finance roles, maybe more slack with harder schools / majors).

    – If you are a few years out of college, you can omit it, but still expect some questions and have defensive points prepared for interviews (i.e. improvement trend, switched majors, many internships, etc.)

    – If you are a more recent grad, I would err on the side of including anything 3.0/4.0+.

    – However, if you are on the lower end, I recommend showing some sort of other relevant GPA metric (i.e. “Pro-forma Adjusted” GPA) next to the actual (or just the latter if your actual GPA is sub 3.0)

    – This can be your major GPA, “excluding Engineering” GPA if you switched from majors, “excluding Freshman year GPA” if you partied too hard, etc. Goal is to show any sort of academic prowess.

    – PE folks value a strong GPA as a proxy for work ethic and smarts, but it’s not the only thing.

  • Relevant Coursework: If you’re coming from a non-finance background or you’re a recent grad, it can help to list a few finance or accounting courses (e.g., Financial Statement Analysis, Advanced Corporate Finance). This shows you’ve built academic finance knowledge.

    – If you did any significant projects or a thesis relevant to investing, you can mention that too. (e.g., Financial Statement Analysis, Advanced Corporate Finance).

  • Certifications (Student/Recent Grad): CFA levels passed, etc. Not usually recommended as an effective method for breaking in, but if you have them, may as well show it off.

Education Example:

University of X – B.A. in Economics, Cum Laude, 2019 (GPA: 3.5; Major GPA: 3.8)

  • Honors: Dean’s List (6/8 semesters); CFA Level I (passed)

Skills

Next, have a section for Skills and Interests. This is usually a concise bullet list or a few brief lines that summarize what you bring to the table beyond your job titles. Tailor this to private equity and to highlight your unique “edge factors” (i.e. I don’t have a language line because I can barely speak English sometimes).

  • Technical Skills / Certifications
    • For those already with a banking / management consulting position, I would focus on listing specific programs you used (i.e. CapIQ, FactSet, Pitchbook, etc.)
    • For others looking to pivot, may be worth calling out “Advanced Excel / PowerPoint” to demonstrate proficiency. Could also mention relevant technical skills like Financial Modeling (LBO, DCF), Valuation Analysis, Excel (advanced), PowerPoint, and any analytics tools you’ve used (perhaps SQL or Python if relevant for the techies). PE roles assume strong modeling and Office ability.
    • Any other impactful certifications (i.e. CFA, Modeling course certifications) can be listed as well
  • Languages: If you speak any foreign languages, list those too (especially if applying to firms with international focus). Just indicate your proficiency level (e.g., “Fluent in Spanish” or “Conversational Mandarin”). PE firms investing globally value language skills

These sections should be skimmable – a quick way for someone to see, “Alright, they’ve got the modeling, valuation, and maybe CFA I want to see.” Many firms (and their applicant tracking systems) also scan for these keywords here, so it’s partly about keyword SEO for your resume.

  • Leadership & Activities: If you have leadership roles in professional organizations or relevant clubs, mention them. For instance, “Finance Club President at XYZ University,” or “Board member of local Investment Club.” This can also cover any meaningful volunteer work or mentoring (especially if it’s leadership or finance-related).
  • Interests: Yes, the good ‘ol Interests section. This is optional but highly recommened for humanizing you and serving as an interview icebreaker. Keep it to one line of a few interests or hobbies that you genuinely pursue or know well. Bonus for non-generic unique things like ultra-marathon running, Fear Factor contestant, or if you want immediate callbacks, Pro Pickeball player.
  • Publications/Achievements: If you authored any finance-related articles, won a stock-picking competition, or achieved something notable professionally that didn’t fit above, you could include a brief mention here.
  • For certain firms (get the vibe from their website), familiarity with ESG-related impact on investment decisions is becoming a valuable asset. If you have experience analyzing ESG risks / opportunities or relevant coursework, it can be worth highlighting.

Keep this personal section brief as well, It should add color to your profile without overwhelming. One line for interests is plenty. Recruiters do read this part (quickly) to see if something is interesting about you, or to find a personal connection point. Make it count, but don’t overdo it.

Real Talk: Don’t Sleep on ‘Interests’

I once saw a Partner get excited about a candidate purely because they listed ‘Backcountry Skiing’ as an interest. It sounds trivial, but everyone is just looking for a hook for a human connection in a sea of identical resumes.

Don’t waste it with ‘Reading, Movies, Travel.’ Be specific. Be interesting. And, have old money hobbies if possible 😉

How to Describe Deal Experience (and What to Say)

The Experience section is the heart of your Private Equity resume. This is where you prove you can make it in PE. Structure it in reverse chronological order (latest job first), and for each role include Company name, Title, Location, and Dates. Then use bullet points to describe achievements (not just duties). Here’s how to break it down:

  • Highlight Finance & Deals Format: For each role, emphasize any finance-related or deal-related work you did. If you worked in investment banking or consulting, lead with the deals or projects (e.g., “Advised on 3 sell-side M&A transactions totaling $500M in value”). If you’re from a non-traditional background, identify aspects of your job that align with the PE skillset.
    • Did you analyze data, manage a budget, improve a process, evaluate investments or partnerships? Those can be presented as your “deals.”
      • For example, if you worked in corporate development or even in an operational role: “Managed evaluation of 5 potential suppliers, negotiating cost savings of 15%” – that sounds like diligence and value creation, which resonates with PE.
      • Another Example of a strong, quantifiable bullet: “Led financial modeling (DCF, LBO) for a $50M potential acquisition in the SaaS sector, identifying 15% potential synergies not previously considered
  • Use Action + Result Bullets: Crucial. Show action taken and quantifiable impact.
    • This is crucial. PE firms skim for results: increased revenue, decreased costs, improved a process, closed a deal, etc. Quantify outcomes wherever possible (“increased X by 20%,” “saved $1M in expenses,” “grew users 3x”, etc.).
      • For MM, focus on metrics that resonate with middle-market investors, who drove ~80% of 2025 deal flow per Pitchbook
        • If you can’t put a number, describe a tangible impact (“streamlined reporting process to enable faster decision-making”).
    • Formula: What you did + how you did it (if relevant) + outcome (shows ownership, scale, and impact)
      • Instead of: “Assisted in due diligence for deals.”
      • Say: Led due diligence for a potential $50M acquisition; uncovered operational inefficiencies that informed a 10% lower valuation offer.”
Example of weak vs. strong private equity resume bullet points, showing how to transform generic descriptions into quantified, investor-focused achievements.
  • PE-Relevant Language: Make sure your bullets use PE-relevant language. Use the lingo appropriately (see the Keywords section below for ideas). Frame your experience in terms of value, strategy, and analysis as much as possible.
    • For instance, a consultant might say, “Developed investment thesis for client’s market entry strategy” – the term investment thesis nods to PE-style thinking.
    • If you’re a software engineer pivoting to PE, you might highlight “Analyzed user growth and unit economics to inform product investment decisions” – showing you think about business metrics, not just code.
  • Leadership & Teamwork: Private equity is a people business as much as a numbers one. If you led a team or project, mention it.
    • E.g., “Managed a team of 4 analysts on a financial modeling project…” or “Collaborated with cross-functional team to execute…”.
    • This signals you can work in high-pressure team environments – a big part of PE deal teams and portfolio management. Just be sure to tie it to a result (leadership for its own sake is nice, but leadership that delivers is gold).
  • Keep It Recent and Relevant: Generally, focus more on your recent and relevant roles. It’s okay if your older jobs have fewer bullets. And if you have very unrelated jobs way back (like a college retail job and now you’re 5 years out of school), you can omit or minimize them. PE recruiters mostly care about what you’re doing now and maybe one job prior, unless something older is extremely relevant. Be ruthless about trimming fluff – every bullet should earn its place

Experience Section Example Snippet:

XYZ Investment Bank – Analyst (San Francisco, CA | 2021 – Present)

  • Executed 4 M&A deals in the tech sector with combined value of ~$1.2B, including drafting CIMs and analyzing valuation multiples.
  • Built detailed LBO and DCF models for a $300M private placement; identified key value drivers that were adopted in the investment committee’s decision.
  • Led due diligence workstream for a potential acquisition (IoT startup), uncovering $5M in cost synergies that increased projected IRR by 3%.
  • Collaborated with senior partners to present deal findings to clients and internal investment committee, demonstrating ability to communicate complex analyses.
  • (Notice the action verbs (executed, built, led, collaborated) and the results (value of deals, key drivers identified, $5M synergies, etc.).

By structuring your Private Equity resume with Experience, Education, and Skills / Interests, you cover all the bases. The layout is clean and familiar to finance recruiters. In fact, many PE firms and headhunters expect this standardized structure – it makes their scanning job easier. (Remember, clarity and simplicity win, because resumes with simple layouts and clear sections held recruiters’ attention longer


No (or Not Great) Deal Experience? Use Proxies to Show PE Thinking

Tailoring is key, especially if you are from a non-traditional background. Even if you have a more typical background (IB -> PE), tailoring can still be crucial.

Tailoring means customizing how you describe your experience so that it resonates with what private equity firms want. It’s about speaking the “PE language” and showcasing relevant skills – even if you unconventionally gained them.

1. Re-frame Your Experience Through a Financial Lens: Take every piece of experience you have and ask, “How is this relevant to an investor or dealmaker?” You might be surprised – most jobs have aspects that PE firms care about.

  • For example, if you worked in marketing, you likely dealt with budgets and growth metrics (so you did touch on financial outcomes). If you were an engineer, you solved complex problems and maybe led projects (demonstrating analytical thinking and leadership). Frame your accomplishments in terms of results, dollars, percentages, efficiencies, or strategic insights. In our Ultimate Guide, we said “tailor ruthlessly” – and that’s the mindset here at uplevered.com.
  • Cut out or downplay things that don’t translate to the PE skillset, and emphasize the aspects that do. This might mean changing a title (e.g., “Project Manager” could be “Project Manager – Corporate Strategy” if that better reflects what you did), or it might mean altering bullet points to highlight financial impact over general duties.

2. Use PE Keywords and Jargon (Strategically): Pepper your resume with key terms that PE folks use, but only where you actually have a basis to use them.

  • This does two things: it signals “I get your world,” and it helps with keyword scanning (many recruiters use CTRL+F or ATS systems to find terms like “LBO” or “Private Equity”). For instance, maybe you didn’t directly do due diligence, but you researched new vendors or investments – that’s essentially diligence. You could phrase it as “Conducted due diligence on potential business partners…”.
  • If you ran numbers on a project’s benefits, call it “financial analysis” or “built a forecast model.” The trick is to translate your work into the equivalent PE term. An internal project becomes an “initiative” or “investment case,” a business plan becomes a “strategy roadmap,” and improving efficiency becomes “operational improvement.”

We’ve provided a list of power keywords in the next section – use it as inspiration to spin your wording. However, don’t go overboard or mislead – you must be able to back up every term in interviews. (If you say you did “LBO analysis,” be prepared to discuss the model or at least the concepts.)

3. Quantify and Be Specific: can’t stress this enough, specifics and numbers will make even unrelated experience sound relevant. Private equity folks are numbers-driven, so show them numbers in your story.

  • If you managed a team, say how many people. If you handled a budget, state the dollar value. If you grew something, give the percentage growth. Turn “improved X” into “improved X by Y% resulting in Z outcome.” This not only makes your accomplishments clear, it subconsciously tells the reader, “This person understands measurable impact” – which is exactly what investors focus on.
  • Even if your previous role wasn’t finance-heavy, odds are you can find some metrics: customer satisfaction scores, time saved, revenue or cost improvements, users acquired, etc. Also, naming specifics (like “evaluated 3 new product lines” instead of “several new product lines”) adds credibility. Numbers speak louder than adjectives when it comes to impressing PE recruiters.

4. Develop Your Narrative (“Why You, Why PE”): Especially as a non-traditional candidate, you need to connect the dots for the resume reader. They shouldn’t have to play detective to figure out why you’re pivoting into private equity – you should make that obvious.

  • Use your resume content to subtly build a narrative. If truly needed, you can add a brief focused Summary at the top (a one-liner stating your intention and unique value can help). Additionally, ensure your bullet points collectively answer: “What value do I bring? Why do I want PE? And what makes me unique?”
  • For example, if you switched careers (like I did), explicitly mention the reason in your most recent experience: e.g., “Joined XYZ Bank to gain M&A transaction experience, preparing for a long-term career in private equity.” You might include that as a sub-bullet or even part of your job title line if space allows.

Real Talk: Framing Your Narrative is Key

In one of my career moves, I actually made it clear that I took a pay cut to move into investment banking for the purpose of gaining deal experience – it showed intent. It might feel odd to share such items on a resume, but it can be effective.

At minimum, your story should make sense: your skills build up, and your interest in investing is evident through actions you’ve taken (courses, side projects, moving into more finance-heavy roles, etc.). A cohesive narrative will make the reader root for you as a candidate, rather than scratch their head.

5. If It’s Not Obvious, Add Proxy Experience: Let’s say you truly have zero finance or deal experience – perhaps you’re in an unrelated industry entirely. In that case, it’s worth creating some “proxy” experiences to fill the gap (and you can absolutely include these on your resume).

  • This could mean doing an investment case study or project on your own. For instance, build an LBO model for a company on your own time and label it under a section “Investment Projects,” or write a one-page investment memo for a stock you find interesting. You could list this like a job entry (with a label like “Self-Initiated PE Case Study – 2025”) and have a couple of bullets:
    • e.g., “Built LBO model for ABC Corp, a public manufacturer, to evaluate a hypothetical take-private deal; presented findings including potential IRR and key drivers,” and “Analyzed XYZ Company’s financials and industry to write a 2-page investment memo recommending a growth equity investment.”
  • This shows tangible initiative and interest in PE. It won’t carry the same weight as actual deal experience, but it’s far better than a blank space and demonstrates hustle. In fact, doing this kind of side project is something many hungry non-traditional candidates do to signal passion and capability.

Tailoring Your Private Equity Resume for the Application

If you’re applying to a variety of PE firms — from growth equity to buyout, across different industries — you should make slight tweaks to your resume for each opportunity. Tailor your experience to reflect the firm’s focus and the role you’re applying for (e.g., Analyst vs. Associate).

Why Tailoring Matters

Even if your experience is strong, recruiters want to see that you’ve thought about their role, their fund, and their investment strategy. That’s how you stand out from a stack of generic resumes.

Tailoring for Analyst (Pre-MBA or Early-Career)

  • Emphasize education, internships, and raw technical skills like modeling and valuation.
  • Show hustle: investment clubs, case competitions, side projects, or even cold-sourced deals.
  • One strong deal proxy and a solid academic signal can carry meaningful weight.

Tailoring for Associate (Post-IB, Post-MBA, or Lateral)

  • Focus on deal execution experience and leadership on live transactions.
  • Use investor-focused phrases like “evaluated investment thesis,” “modeled IRR,” and “recommended strategy to IC.”
  • Highlight mentorship or management of junior team members if applicable.

Tailoring for Industry-Specific Funds

If the fund focuses on a particular vertical (e.g., healthcare, software, consumer), tweak your resume bullets to reflect sector alignment:

  • “Led market diligence on a dermatology roll-up platform”
  • “Built vertical SaaS comps to support growth assumptions”

Even one project in the fund’s space helps signal fit. Consider reordering your bullets so the most relevant experience appears first.

Pro Tip

Don’t just list what you’ve done. Frame it in a way that shows you’re already thinking like their next hire. For example:

  • If a firm specializes in healthcare, highlight any healthcare or life sciences exposure — and move that experience to the top.
  • If they emphasize operational improvement, highlight any examples of efficiency gains, process redesign, or growth enablement you’ve driven.

This level of tailoring shows you’ve done your homework and can speak the firm’s language. Just don’t overdo it – the core resume should remain honest and consistent, but smart emphasis can make all the difference.

Bottom line: Tailoring your Private Equity resume is more work than copy-pasting your last job description, but it’s worth it. A tailored resume says, “I understand what this PE role demands — and I’m already operating with that mindset.” It can help you overcome a “non-traditional” background by demonstrating you already think like an investor.


High-Impact Private Equity Resume Keywords & Power Phrases

Private equity has its own vocabulary. Using the right keywords (appropriately) will make your resume pop to both human readers and applicant tracking systems. Below is a list of high-impact keywords and power phrases to sprinkle throughout your resume where relevant. These words signal key skills or experiences that PE firms value:

  • Deal Execution (e.g., executed X deal, closed Y transaction)
  • Due Diligence (financial due diligence, operational due diligence)
  • Financial Modeling (LBO modeling, DCF analysis, 3-statement models)
  • Valuation (valuation analysis, comparable company analysis, precedent transactions)
  • Leveraged Buyout (LBO) (mention LBO specifically if you built or used LBO models)
  • Investment Thesis (developed an investment thesis for…)
  • ROI / IRR (Return on Investment, Internal Rate of Return – e.g., projected 20% IRR)
  • EBITDA (used in context: grew EBITDA by 15% or 7x EBITDA multiple)
  • Revenue Growth (or sales growth, top-line growth)
  • Margin Expansion (improved profit margins, cost reduction leading to margin growth)
  • Operational Improvement (streamlined operations, reduced costs, improved efficiency)
  • Value Creation (drove value creation initiatives…)
  • Exit Strategy (planned exit strategy or evaluated exit options)
  • Deal Sourcing (sourced X investment opportunities…)
  • Portfolio Management (worked with portfolio companies on Y…)
  • Capital Structure (optimized capital structure, refinancing experience)
  • Industry Jargon (use sector-specific terms if applying to sector-focused fund: e.g., SaaS metrics like ARR for a tech-focused PE, same-store sales for retail, reimbursement rates for healthcare, etc.)

Use these power words in context. For example, instead of saying “Researched new markets,” you might say “Conducted due diligence on new markets.” Instead of “improved profits,” say “expanded EBITDA margin.” The second phrasing in each case is more likely to resonate with someone in private equity.

It’s not about buzzword bingo; it’s about showing you understand what matters in their world. Also, these terms will help your resume rank higher if firms use software to screen for candidates with specific experience (yes, many firms use ATS filters even for small hiring pools).

Pro Tip: If you’re not sure which keywords to prioritize, read a few PE job descriptions (or LinkedIn postings) for roles you want. See which skills and experiences are mentioned frequently – chances are those are the keywords you should mirror if you have those skills. Often you’ll see things like “transaction experience,” “financial modeling,” “due diligence,” “valuation skills,” etc. Make sure those exact phrases appear in your resume naturally (don’t force it).

Lastly, remember that using keywords should not come at the expense of clarity or honesty. Never claim experience you don’t have. But do use the richest, most specific terminology for the experience you do have.


Formatting Your Buy-Side Resume for 2025

Now that we have the content nailed down, let’s talk about a junior banker’s favorite pastime – formatting. It’s not glamorous, but poor formatting can sabotage great content. A well-formatted resume ensures your hard-earned achievements actually get read. Here are some formatting best practices for a private equity resume, along with common traps to avoid:

One-Page Rule and Formatting Guidelines

  • Length – Keep it to One Page: Aim for a one-page resume.
    • PE recruiters expect a concise summary of your accomplishments. The general rule: if you have under ~8-10 years of experience, one page is the standard. (Senior folks with many deals might spill over to two, but if you’re early/mid-career, one page is plenty.)
    • This means you’ll need to be selective. Cut filler words and irrelevant details. Every line should deliver value. A shorter, focused resume is much stronger than a dense two-pager that no one finishes reading.
    • Exception: If you’re required to submit a detailed deal sheet or transaction list separately, that can go beyond one page – but your core resume should still stand alone on one.
  • Font and Readability: Use a clean, professional font in an 10pt-12pt size. Classics like Arial, Calibri, Times New Roman, or Garamond are safe bets.
    • Don’t use funky or “script” fonts – this is finance, not graphic design. Ensure the text is easily readable (no tiny 8pt font to squeeze more in; no excessively big font either). Maintain decent margins (around 0.5 to 1 inch) so the page isn’t overly cluttered.
    • White space is your friend; a cramped resume is hard on the eyes. Remember, recruiters favor resumes with clear layouts and white space. Bold your section headings (Education, Experience, etc.) and maybe your company names or titles, but don’t overdo different colors or italics. Simplicity and consistency win here.
  • Bullet Points – Structure and Style: Use bullet points (not paragraphs) to describe your experiences. Each bullet should ideally be one to two lines max.
    • Start each bullet with a strong action verb (Managed, Led, Analyzed, Built, Improved, etc.). Write in telegraphic style – no need for full sentences or personal pronouns (“I”). For example, “Analyzed market trends and developed 5-year revenue forecast leading to 15% budget increase”. Notice we drop the “I” and get straight to the point.
    • Also, maintain parallel structure: if one bullet starts with a past-tense verb, all should (for past jobs). Consistency in verb tense and formatting is part of that polish.
  • Consistent Formatting: This sounds nitpicky, but in private equity, details matter. Make sure your dates are formatted the same everywhere (e.g., Jan 2022 – Dec 2023 or 2022 – 2023, pick one style and stick with it).
    • If you use em dashes or hyphens between dates, do it uniformly. Ensure alignment is clean (some people use tables or tabs in Word to keep things aligned – do whatever works). If you have a space or a period at the end of one bullet, do it for all or none. These little things can stick out to a detail-oriented reviewer.
    • An inconsistent format might subconsciously signal you lack attention to detail. Before sending out your resume, do a final consistency sweep (or have a friend with a keen eye review it).
  • No Graphics or Photos: This is a common pitfall from people outside of finance or from regions where photo resumes are common.
    • For private equity roles (especially in the U.S.), do not include a photo of yourself or fancy graphics. It’s seen as unprofessional in this industry. Your resume should look like a professional document, not a flyer.
    • Also, avoid headshots, logos of companies, or any images. Stick to text – well-formatted text.
  • File Format: Always send your resume as a PDF unless instructed otherwise. A PDF preserves your formatting exactly as intended.
    • A Word doc can look different on another computer, and .pages or .ppt resumes (yes, I’ve seen it) will just get tossed. Name the file something simple and clear, like FirstName_LastName_Resume.pdf. This looks professional and is easy for recruiters to handle.
  • Spell Check and Proofread: It should go without saying, but zero typos is the standard. Use spell check, but also manually proofread.
    • Check that company names are spelled correctly (and use the official company name from your time there).
    • Ensure numbers are consistent (if you said $5 million somewhere, don’t write 5,000,000 elsewhere – keep a consistent format like $X.XM).
    • And please ensure you haven’t accidentally left another company’s name in there from a template – a surprisingly common mistake when people rush to edit an old resume. Printing it out can help spot errors that screen reading misses.
  • Avoid Jargon Overload / Unclear Abbreviations: While we encouraged using PE lingo, make sure any acronyms you use are well-known or spelled out at least once.
    • Common ones like EBITDA, LBO, DCF are fine. But if you worked in a specific industry with obscure acronyms, spell those out for a general audience.
    • The first time you mention something like ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue), for instance, you can do “ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue)” to be safe. You want the resume to be understandable to any finance professional, not just someone from your last job.

How to Optimize for Readability and Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS)

Don’t Get Fancy with Formatting. Some candidates try multi-column formats, or putting huge blocks of text in a sidebar. Be cautious with this. A two-column format can confuse the reading order and also often doesn’t parse well in ATS software. Similarly, weird color backgrounds or text boxes might make it hard for recruiters to copy-paste or highlight text (and could trigger ATS issues).

The safest bet is a classic single-column resume with clear sections. You can use subtle design elements like slightly larger font for your name, maybe a line or small separator between sections, but nothing more. Content over style, every time. You want a layout that guides the reader’s eye naturally top to bottom (studies show resumes in an “F” or “E” reading pattern, with strong headings, fare best per hrdive.com).

Think of formatting like setting the stage for a performance: if the lighting and sound are off, the best performance might flop. So set the stage so that your content shines.

A polished format shows professionalism and lets the reader find what they need quickly, increasing the odds your resume lands in the “yes” pile.


Private Equity Resume Examples: Before-and-After Bullet Points

Nothing illustrates the difference between a generic resume and a PE-tailored resume better than seeing actual bullet points transform. Below are several before-and-after examples of resume bullets, showing a weak version versus an improved, private equity–ready version. Use these as inspiration to rewrite your own bullets.

Example 1: Investment Banking Analyst role

  • Before: Assisted senior team members with financial models and participated in due diligence calls.
  • After: Built a 3-statement LBO model to support a potential $250M acquisition at 8x EBITDA; identified $10M in cost synergies during due diligence, boosting projected IRR by 4%.

Why it’s better: The “Before” sounds like a passive helper with no sense of scale or outcome. The “After” shows ownership (built a model), specifics (3-statement LBO, $250M, 8x EBITDA multiple), and a result (found $10M in savings -> higher IRR). It’s packed with PE lingo and demonstrates impact, not just activity.

Example 2: Corporate/Operational role (non-finance background)

  • Before: Managed a team of 10 in the operations department and improved process efficiency.
  • After: Led a 10-member operations team to streamline supply chain processes, reducing inventory costs by $500K (15%) and improving EBITDA margin by 2% in one year.

Why it’s better: The original is vague (“improved efficiency” by how much?). The revised bullet quantifies the improvement ($500K cost savings, 15% reduction, 2% margin lift) and uses a metric (EBITDA margin) that finance folks care about. It also highlights leadership and a clear outcome. This takes a non-finance job and makes it highly relevant to value creation in a business – exactly what PE firms like to see.

Example 3: Consulting or Big 4 Advisory role

  • Before: Performed market research for client projects and helped create presentations.
  • After: Analyzed market entry opportunities for a client’s investment project, developing a data-driven investment thesis that identified a $30M revenue opportunity; presented findings to C-suite, directly influencing the client’s go/no-go decision.

Why it’s better: The initial bullet sounds like an entry-level task with no context. The improved version reframes it as investment-oriented (calls it an investment thesis), quantifies the opportunity ($30M), and shows that the work had an impact (influencing a decision). It also highlights presentation to senior execs, implying strong communication skills.

Example 4: Non-Profit / Unconventional background example

  • Before: Organized fundraising events for a local non-profit; learned teamwork and communication.
  • After: Spearheaded a fundraising initiative at XYZ Non-Profit, raising $200K (25% above goal) by analyzing donor data to target high-yield prospects; showcased strategic planning and stakeholder communication.

Why it’s better: The “Before” might be true, but it doesn’t translate to PE. The “After” version uses a financial metric (raised $200K, beat goal by 25%), and cleverly ties the experience to PE-relevant skills (strategic planning, data analysis, stakeholder communication, which is like investor relations). It shows even in a non-profit role, the candidate drove results and thought strategically – traits PE firms value.

In each of these examples, the strong version is more specific, quantitative, and written in a way that mirrors how an investor thinks (focusing on value, opportunity size, efficiency gains, etc.). Take a critical look at your own resume bullets and ask: Can I make this more concrete? Can I add a number or outcome? Does this sound like something a PE professional would brag about? If not, time to rewrite.

(Quick exercise: Pick one of your resume bullets and pretend you’re reading it as a PE hiring manager – would you be impressed? If not, use the above examples as a guide to revamp it.)


Common Private Equity Resume Mistakes to Avoid

To sum up some traps:

  • Don’t be vague (e.g., “involved in deals” – specify what you did and the impact).
  • Don’t focus on chores over achievements (e.g., avoid “organized files for team” – that won’t win points; choose more impactful tasks).
  • Don’t leave out numbers (missing quantifiable results is a missed opportunity – numbers jump off the page).
  • Don’t ignore operations/leadership if you have it (PE isn’t only deals; showing you improved a business operation or led a team is valuable).
  • And finally, don’t send out a resume that isn’t tailored – a generic resume that doesn’t highlight relevant experience to PE will blend into the pile.
  • Auto Screening / ATS: PE firms increasingly use Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) to filter resumes. Ensure your resume uses standard section headings (e.g., ‘Work Experience,’ ‘Skills’), incorporates keywords from the job description, and avoids tables or images that can be misread by software.”

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the most important section on a private equity resume?


The “Work Experience” section is the most critical:

– Recruiters look for detailed, quantifiable evidence of your transaction experience, including financial modeling, valuation, and due diligence

– Highlighting your direct impact on deals provides concrete evidence of your capabilities

How can I make my resume stand out if I have no direct private equity deal experience?


– Highlight transferable skills from other roles or academic projects.

– Emphasize strong analytical abilities, financial modeling projects, relevant coursework, and any M&A or valuation work done in other contexts like consulting or corporate development

– The key is to show you understand valuation, can analyze companies, and have the drive to learn.

Is a one-page resume still the standard for private equity applications?


Yes, for most candidates at the analyst and associate levels, a concise one-page resume is strongly preferred / expected. Recruiters spend seconds on the initial scan, so efficient presentation of the most impactful information key

What skills should I highlight for a PE resume in 2025?


– Focus on core financial skills like LBO modeling, DCF valuation, and due diligence

– Additionally, showcase emerging competencies such as familiarity with AI tools in finance / data analytics, and, if a more “edgey” firm, an understanding of ESG factors in investment decisions, etc.


Download the Resume Templates

Grab the full UpLevered private equity resume template in your preferred format below — no email required.

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What to Do After Your Resume Is Ready

  • Leverage Headhunters: Use your polished resume to engage PE-specific recruiting firms.
  • Network Proactively & Go Off-Cycle: Connect directly with firms and professionals. (Refer to our Ultimate Guide for networking strategies).
  • Request Informational Feedback: Share your resume during informational interviews.
  • Keep Updated: Continuously update with new achievements.
  • Complement with Cover Letters/Emails: Always include a tailored, concise introduction.

Where to Send It and How to Get Noticed

Crafting the perfect private equity resume is a huge step – congrats on getting it done. Now, how do you use this resume to actually land a PE role? A few final pointers on deploying your new-and-improved resume in the real world:

  • Leverage Headhunters: Many private equity firms, especially mid to large funds, rely on recruiting firms (headhunters) to source candidates – particularly for the traditional on-cycle recruiting of analysts/associates.
    • Once your resume is polished, start reaching out to headhunters that specialize in PE placements. Send a brief, professional email introducing yourself, attach your resume (PDF format, named properly), and express your interest in opportunities.
      • Your resume should do a lot of the talking for you. Headhunters scan resumes to decide if you’re a fit for their roster, and now yours should tick the right boxes.
    • Also, be ready to discuss anything on that resume if they call you – they often probe your deal experience or ask you to walk through your resume.
    • Pro-tip: You can find lists of PE recruiting firms that dominate middle-market private equity careers (e.g., CPI, Oxbridge, SG Partners, etc.) via a quick search. Get on their radar early, even if off-cycle.
  • Go Off-Cycle & Be Proactive: Not all PE hiring happens in one big structured wave. Off-cycle recruiting (openings that pop up outside the usual timeline) is a golden opportunity for non-traditional candidates. With your resume in hand, you can start networking and cold outreaching to smaller PE shops or firms that interest you.
    • This means perhaps sending a message or email to an associate or VP at the firm (maybe an alum from your school or someone you have a connection with) and politely inquiring about opportunities, attaching your resume.
    • You might also respond to job postings for private equity roles that are less publicized. Because off-cycle hires are often more ad-hoc, having a standout resume ready to go is crucial – sometimes the window to apply or send your info is small.
    • Always tailor your email and show genuine interest in that firm. Your resume will back you up by showcasing that you’re serious and prepared for PE.
  • Use Your Resume as a Networking Tool (using our guide!): Your resume isn’t just for job applications – it’s a great reason to start conversations. For example, if you’re doing informational interviews (which we highly recommend), you can offer your resume to the person you’re chatting with to get their feedback.
  • Keep It Up-to-Date / Ready to Send: This seems basic, but make sure to update your resume with any new achievements as they happen, so you’re not scrambling when an opportunity arises.
    • Save it in a cloud drive (with version control) so you can send it even if you’re away from your computer. You never know when a recruiter might ping you or when you’ll meet someone who says “Sure, send me your resume.” Being able to fire it off within minutes (and feeling proud of it) can make a difference.
  • Combine with a Solid Cover Letter or Email Intro: While a resume can sometimes speak for itself, don’t neglect the importance of a good cover letter or introductory email when submitting applications cold.
    • A brief note that highlights your top selling points (“XY years in [relevant experience], led [impactful project], pivoting to PE because [authentic reason]”) and then says “Attached is my resume for your consideration” can personalize your application.
    • However, remember: the resume will often get the most attention, so ensure the two documents complement each other without redundancy.

Finally, remember that your private equity resume is part of a larger process. It will get you interviews, but then you have to convert those interviews into offers.

So while you await responses, prep for interviews and case studies (check out our Private Equity Interview Guide). And keep building your network. The resume might open a door, but your skills and story in person will seal the deal.


Learn More: Breaking into Private Equity

Now that your private equity resume is ready, pair it with strategies from our Ultimate Guide on How to Break Into Private Equity for maximum effectiveness.

Another key part of the process involves leveraging your new resume through effective private equity networking strategies.

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