Marketing is one of the few fields where the work produces numbers as a matter of course. That's an advantage on a CV, and most marketing managers waste it. They describe campaigns they ran instead of the results those campaigns delivered. A hiring manager skimming a stack of marketing CVs is hunting for impact: growth, revenue, retention, reach. Give them that fast, and you stand out from everyone listing channels they've "managed."
Here's how to build a marketing manager CV that leads with what you actually moved.
Open with a summary that names your specialty
Marketing manager covers a lot of ground, from brand to performance to lifecycle. A recruiter wants to know which one you are in the first three seconds. Use a two-line summary that states your focus and your biggest result.
Performance marketing manager with seven years scaling paid acquisition. Grew a SaaS company's signups 4x in 18 months while holding CAC flat.
That tells them more than a paragraph of adjectives.
Lead every experience bullet with a result
This is the part that separates strong marketing CVs from forgettable ones. Don't write what you were responsible for, write what changed because of you. Put the number first so it can't be missed.
- Weak: Managed the company's email marketing program.
- Strong: Rebuilt the email lifecycle program, lifting activation rate from 22% to 35% and adding roughly 180k in monthly recurring revenue.
Not every line needs a number, but your top three bullets in each role should. If you genuinely don't have the data, describe the concrete outcome instead: a launch you owned, a channel you opened, a team you built.
Pick metrics that match the role you want
Marketing metrics aren't interchangeable. A growth role cares about CAC, conversion, and pipeline. A brand role cares about awareness, share of voice, and engagement. A lifecycle role cares about retention and LTV. Read the job posting and foreground the metrics that team lives by. The same campaign can be framed for either audience depending on which number you put first.
Show the tools, but don't drown in them
Marketing has a long tool list, and it's tempting to dump all of it. Don't. List the platforms that matter for your specialty: your ad platforms, your analytics stack, your CRM or marketing automation, maybe one or two specialist tools. Eight to ten is plenty. A wall of forty logos reads as padding, and the recruiter can't tell what you're actually good at.
Name the campaigns worth remembering
If you led a launch, a rebrand, or a campaign that hit real numbers, give it a short callout rather than burying it in a bullet. One or two sentences on the goal, what you did, and the result. This is what gets brought up in the interview, so make it easy to find.
When you tailor this CV to a specific posting, mirror the exact metrics and channels the job names so it reads as a direct fit and clears the ATS keyword scan. A tool like Postulit can pull your roles and achievements from LinkedIn into a clean structure, leaving you to do the part that matters: choosing the right numbers to lead with.
Marketing managers get hired on evidence they can move a metric. Build the CV around the metrics you've moved, match them to the role, and let the results carry the page.