Marketing resumes rely on portfolio links, creative titles, and abbreviated tool names. ATS systems ignore all three. Your campaigns, metrics, and tools need to live in plain text before any human ever sees your portfolio. Here is how to make that work.
Marketing is one of the few fields where candidates routinely present their best work through external links, visual portfolios, and case study decks. None of this helps your ATS score. Applicant tracking systems parse text. They do not visit your Behance profile, render your PDF case studies, or evaluate the quality of your creative work. They count keywords in plain text.
This creates a specific challenge: the very things that make a great marketing candidate (campaign results, creative problem solving, brand intuition) are the hardest things to convey in keyword-dense plain text. The solution is to describe your work in the language of marketing analytics: campaign type, budget managed, channels used, metrics improved, and tools applied. Each of these categories generates scorable keywords.
Creative job titles are a secondary problem. "Content Ninja" and "Growth Hacker" signal culture fit to a human but confuse an ATS classifier. Use the standard functional title in your headline and experience section, and reserve the colorful branding for your summary or cover letter. ATS CV Checker shows you exactly which marketing terms and tool names are missing from your resume on any specific posting.
These tools, channels, and metrics appear most often in marketing job descriptions. Missing the relevant ones lowers your keyword match score even with strong campaign experience.
Why marketing and creative resumes score low on ATS even when candidates have strong work histories
Marketing candidates rely heavily on portfolio links to demonstrate their work. ATS systems strip hyperlinks during parsing and do not visit URLs. A Behance portfolio with 50 campaigns contributes zero keywords to your ATS score. Move your accomplishments into the resume body as plain text: "Managed paid social campaigns generating $2.4M in attributed revenue" beats a link to your case studies. The work gets credit when described in text, not when linked.
"Growth Hacker," "Brand Storyteller," "Digital Evangelist," or "Content Ninja" are not in any ATS taxonomy table. The system cannot classify your seniority or function. Use standard marketing titles: "Content Marketing Manager," "Paid Media Specialist," "Brand Manager," "SEO Manager." If your actual title is non-standard, list it parenthetically after the standard equivalent: "Content Marketing Lead (Brand Storyteller)."
Marketing and creative roles list tools explicitly. "Adobe PS" may not match "Photoshop." "CC" may not match "Adobe Creative Cloud." "GA4" may not match "Google Analytics." Write out both the full name and the abbreviation for every tool on your resume: "Adobe Photoshop (PS), Adobe Illustrator (AI), Google Analytics 4 (GA4)." Each form covers a different search pattern in the ATS.
Writing "improved campaign performance" or "increased engagement" contributes almost no keywords. ATS systems in marketing score for specific metric terms: "conversion rate," "cost per acquisition (CPA)," "click-through rate (CTR)," "return on ad spend (ROAS)," "email open rate," "organic traffic." Use these exact terms in your bullet points alongside your results. The metric name is the keyword; the number is what convinces the human reviewer.
Include it but do not rely on it. ATS systems do not visit URLs, so your portfolio contributes zero to your keyword score. Add the link in your header for human reviewers, but ensure every campaign, result, and tool you want credit for is also described in plain text within your experience section. The URL is a bonus for humans; the text is what the ATS scores.
Create a dedicated skills section that lists tools, platforms, and specializations as plain text. Then, in your experience section, describe specific creative projects with measurable outcomes. "Directed a rebrand campaign across six product lines that increased brand awareness by 34% (Nielsen survey, Q4 2023)" gives the ATS keywords like rebrand, campaign, brand awareness, and the specific measurement tool.
Yes, significantly. "HubSpot Inbound Marketing Certified," "Google Analytics Certified," and "Meta Blueprint Certified" are recognized keywords in marketing ATS configurations. List each with the full certification name, the platform, and the year earned. Do not abbreviate: "HubSpot Certified" is weaker than "HubSpot Inbound Marketing Certified, 2024."