Hi, I’m Nate. This advice is for finance managers stepping into leadership mid-career or aiming for senior roles, helping balance technical expertise with leadership credibility.
FOCUS ON THE STORY BEHIND THE NUMBERS
Every bullet should answer: What was the problem? What did you do? What changed? Show challenge, action, and measurable result.
Example:
“Reduced aged debtor days from 90 to 60 by redesigning the collection cadence and introducing weekly KPI dashboards. This freed $2.5M in working capital and lowered DSO by 33%, enabling new growth initiatives without additional borrowing.”
SHOWCASE KEY ACHIEVEMENTS
Add optional sections like Key Achievements or Projects to highlight cross-functional wins, cost-saving initiatives, or system implementations.
Example:
“Implemented a new remittance system, cutting customer queries by 50%.”
BALANCE TECHNICAL AND SOFT SKILLS
Keep technical skills (SAP, Advanced Excel) in a clear, scannable section for ATS. Demonstrate leadership and soft skills through results-driven bullets:
“Led a team of five analysts to improve forecasting accuracy by 15%.”
AVOID RESUME CLUTTER
Remove unnecessary duties or fluff. Focus on measurable outcomes that show strategic impact rather than day-to-day operations.
FINAL TAKEAWAY
Think of your resume like a career balance sheet: assets are skills, liabilities are fluff, and net impact is the story hiring managers care about. Lead with outcomes, clean up the format, and tailor each resume to the role.
NEXT STEPS
For full walkthroughs, examples, and templates, check out the Enhancv Finance Manager Guide.