Write CV
Writing a CV means cutting your own life into pieces, judging what is worth a line, and writing formally about yourself. That is not a writing problem, it is a decision problem. The cards below break it apart.
♀Writing CV
A person with curly hair writes on a CV document with a marker pen.
About this visual support
The hardest part of a CV is rarely the spelling. It is looking at your own story from the outside and deciding what belongs under Experience, what is Education, what counts as Skills, and what should not be there at all. That is executive function at full size: sort, prioritise, phrase, all without an obvious right answer.
Visual support for writing a CV makes those decisions visible. With each heading as its own card in front of you, the question is no longer ‘what do I write in a CV’ but ‘what goes under this heading’. That is a smaller question, and a smaller question is one you can answer.
One practical tip: do not start with the Personal profile or About me section, start with Experience and Education where the facts already exist. Once those lines are down, your head has something to read back when it is time to find the tone at the top. To break the application day into chunks with breaks and time limits, you can build the flow in Routined.