CV Advice for Designers That Actually Gets You Noticed.

Here's something that might sting a bit: hiring managers and Creative Directors spend about 8 to 10 seconds looking at your CV. That's it. Less time than it takes to make a cup of tea.

So your CV needs to work fast. It needs to be easy to read, immediately clear, and visually confident enough that they actually keep reading instead of moving on to the next one.

We've reviewed hundreds of CVs from interior designers, graphic designers, architects, and branding specialists over the years, and we've heard feedback from some of London's top Creative Directors and studio leaders. Here's what actually matters.

Start With the Basics

Your name and contact details need to be at the top. We know this sounds ridiculously obvious, but you'd be amazed how many CVs we've received with no name or no phone number. If a hiring manager is in a rush and can't immediately see how to reach you, your CV goes in the bin.

Don't let that be you.

And please, no headshots. Your work speaks for itself.

Your CV Should Look Like a Designer Made It

Let's be honest here: you're a designer. Your CV is a design piece. It should absolutely reflect your aesthetic sensibility, your understanding of layout, typography, and visual hierarchy.

Use colour intentionally. Choose typefaces that feel like you. Create a layout that's distinctive but still professional. This is your chance to show you understand how to balance personality with clarity.

But here's the line: don't make it so clever that it's hard to read. If someone has to work to figure out where your experience is or what software you use, you've lost them. The content still needs to be immediately scannable.

Your CV should feel confident and polished, not gimmicky. Think of it as a one-page brand identity exercise where the brand is you.

List Your Design Skills Clearly

Make sure your technical skills are easy to find. For interior designers, that means AutoCAD, SketchUp, Revit, Rhino, 3ds Max, V-Ray, Enscape, whatever you're proficient in. For graphic designers and branding specialists, list your Adobe Creative Suite capabilities, Figma, Sketch, InVision, or any other tools you work with regularly.

Don't rank them with bar charts or percentage scores. Just list them clearly. Your portfolio and experience will show how strong you are in each area.

If you've got hand sketching or technical drawing skills, mention those too. They're still highly valued, especially in interior design and architecture.

Nobody Cares About Your Grades (Unless You've Just Graduated)

If you've recently graduated and got a first or a 2:1, include it. Otherwise, leave your final grade off. Don't list individual module results, and if you're past junior level, skip GCSEs and A-Levels entirely. Your portfolio and work experience are what matter now.

Keep It Tight

Junior to midweight? One page. Senior to associate or team lead? Two pages maximum.

Your most recent role should have the most detail because that's what hiring managers care about. As you go back in time, descriptions should get shorter. Only include responsibilities or projects that actually matter for the type of role you're applying for.

If you're listing every single task you've ever done just to fill space, you're doing it wrong.

Show Your Sector Experience

This is crucial. If you're applying for a hospitality design role, your CV should immediately show your hospitality experience. Residential interior design? Lead with residential projects. Retail branding? Make sure your retail work is front and centre.

Don't make hiring managers hunt for the relevant experience. Put it where they'll see it in those first 8 to 10 seconds.

For architects and interior designers, mention project types and scales: residential refurbs, commercial fit-outs, RIBA stages you've worked on, planning applications, technical packages. Be specific.

For graphic designers and branding specialists, highlight the type of work you've done: brand identity, packaging, digital, print, campaigns, art direction. Sector experience matters here too. FMCG, lifestyle, tech, hospitality.

Your Words Matter

Avoid generic phrases like "team player" and "hard-working." Everyone says that. Instead, show those traits through your actual work. What projects did you deliver? What challenges did you solve? What results did you achieve?

Use language that's specific to design. Don't say you "helped with projects." Say you "led concept development for a 200-cover restaurant fit-out" or "delivered brand guidelines for a luxury residential developer."

Hobbies Should Add Something (Or Leave Them Off)

If you're going to list interests, make them interesting or relevant. Architecture, exhibitions, photography, printmaking, furniture design. These all add context to who you are as a designer.

"Watching TV" and "socialising" add nothing. If you've got nothing compelling to include, just leave the section off.

Proofread Until Your Eyes Hurt

Then get someone else to proofread it too. A partner, a friend, a flatmate, anyone. Typos and grammatical errors make you look careless, and in a visual profession, attention to detail is everything.

If you don't have anyone to ask, use Grammarly or another tool. Just make sure it's spotless before you send it.

Don't Leave Unexplained Gaps

An unexplained gap looks worse than the actual reason for it. If you took time out to travel, freelance, deal with health issues, or handle family matters, just say so briefly. You don't need to over-explain, but acknowledge it. Honesty matters.

Always Send It With Your Portfolio

This should go without saying, but your CV is only half the picture. Always send it alongside a PDF portfolio showcasing your best three to five projects relevant to the role you're applying for. Your CV gets you attention, your portfolio gets you the interview.

We’ve got some tips for your portfolio here if you need some help…

Tailor It Every Single Time

This is what separates designers who get interviews from designers who don't.

If you're applying for a hospitality interior design role, your CV should highlight your hospitality work. If it's a residential architecture position, focus on residential projects. If it's a branding role for an FMCG brand, show FMCG experience.

Don't send the same CV to every job and hope for the best. Hiring managers can tell when you've actually read the brief and tailored your application. It shows you care, and they notice.

The Bottom Line

Your CV is your first impression, and you don't get a second chance at it. Make it look good, make it clear, make it relevant. Show them quickly why they should care, and give them a reason to pick up the phone.

If you're not getting responses and you're wondering whether your CV is holding you back, we're always happy to take a look. Sometimes it's just one or two tweaks that make all the difference.

Need a second pair of eyes on your CV? Want to make sure it's actually working for you? Get in touch. We'd love to help.

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Portfolio Advice That Actually Matters.

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How to Prepare for an Interview at a Creative Studio.