The Part-Time Job Search: How to Write a Resume for a Retirement Gig

Photo-realistic, senior-friendly scene that visually introduces the section titled 'Rethinking Your Resume: From Career Ladder to Lifestyle Fit'.

Rethinking Your Resume: From Career Ladder to Lifestyle Fit

The single biggest mistake retirees make when job searching is using their old resume. That document was a tool for climbing. It was designed to show progression, ambition, and a deep history of accomplishments to justify a higher salary and more responsibility. Your new resume has a different job. Its job is to show you are a perfect fit for a specific, often less demanding, part-time role. It needs to signal reliability, not ambition. It needs to show relevant skills, not a forty-year history.

Think of it as the difference between a detailed atlas and a simple, clear map to a friend’s house. Your old resume was the atlas, showing every road you ever took. Your new retirement resume is the map, showing only the direct path from your experience to the job you want now.

A key part of this process is what we might call “de-aging” your resume. This does not mean being dishonest. It means being selective and strategic to avoid unconscious age bias from hiring managers. Ageism is a real concern, but a modern, clean, and focused resume is your best defense. It shows you are current, tech-savvy, and ready to work in today’s environment.

How to De-Age Your Resume Gracefully

First, remove your graduation dates. Your degree from forty years ago is still valid, but the date can trigger an immediate mental calculation for a recruiter. Simply list the degree and the institution. For example: “Bachelor of Arts in English, University of Michigan.” That’s all they need to know.

Second, cull your work history. You do not need to list every job you’ve ever had. The standard advice is to focus on the last 10 to 15 years of experience. Anything before that can be summarized in a single line or omitted entirely if it’s not relevant. This keeps the document focused and prevents it from looking like an ancient scroll.

Third, update your technology skills. If your resume lists “Microsoft Word 97” or “Lotus Notes,” it’s an immediate red flag. Take some time to familiarize yourself with current software. Most jobs will require basic familiarity with Microsoft Office (Word, Excel) or the Google Suite (Docs, Sheets). Many local libraries and community centers offer free introductory classes. Organizations like AARP also provide resources for digital literacy. You can then confidently list “Microsoft Office Suite” or “Google Workspace” on your resume.

Finally, use a modern format. The days of tiny fonts, dense paragraphs, and objective statements like “To obtain a position utilizing my skills” are long gone. Today’s resumes use clean fonts, plenty of white space to make them easy to read, and a powerful summary at the top. The goal is to create a document that is scannable and easy to digest in just a few seconds.

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