The Anatomy of a Modern Retirement Resume
Let’s break down what a strong resume for a part-time job should look like, section by section. The goal is to create a document that is no more than one page long. Yes, just one page. You have a lifetime of experience, but a hiring manager for a retail position only has a minute to review it. Make that minute count.
Contact Information: Simple and Professional
This section sits at the very top of the page. It should be clean and easy to read. Include only the essentials. Your full name in a slightly larger font. Your city and state—you no longer need your full street address for privacy reasons. Your phone number. And a professional email address. If your email is something like “golfnut77@email.com,” it’s time to create a new, simple one, like “firstname.lastname@email.com.” It’s free and only takes a few minutes. You can also include a link to your LinkedIn profile if, and only if, it is up-to-date and reflects the same professional image as your resume.
Summary: Your 30-Second Elevator Pitch
This is the most important part of your new resume. The old-fashioned “Objective” statement is obsolete. Replace it with a “Professional Summary” or “Summary of Qualifications.” This is a short, 3-to-4-line paragraph that sits right below your contact information. It must be tailored for every single job you apply for. It should immediately answer the hiring manager’s question: “Why should I hire you for this specific job?”
A great summary includes three things. First, it describes who you are professionally. Second, it highlights 2-3 of your most relevant skills or qualities. Third, it states what you are looking for. Let’s go back to our example, Carol, the retired teacher applying for a library job. Her summary could read: “A community-oriented retired educator with over 25 years of experience fostering a love for reading and learning. Seeking a part-time Library Assistant role to leverage exceptional organizational skills and a friendly, patient demeanor to support patrons and library programs. Proficient in database management and customer service.” This is powerful because it’s specific, confident, and directly addresses the needs of a library.
Skills: The Keyword Goldmine
After your summary, a “Skills” section is highly effective. This is where you can list specific, tangible abilities that are relevant to the job. Many companies use software to scan resumes for keywords from the job description. This section helps you get past those initial filters. Read the job posting carefully and use the same language. If they ask for experience with “Point of Sale (POS) systems,” use that exact phrase.
You can break this section into categories to make it easier to read. For example: Customer Service Skills: Patron Assistance, Conflict Resolution, Friendly Demeanor. Technical Skills: Microsoft Office Suite, Data Entry, Inventory Software, POS Systems. Administrative Skills: Scheduling, Record Keeping, Supply Management.
Professional Experience: Less is More
This is where you need to be ruthless. As we discussed, focus only on the last 10-15 years. For each position, list your title, the company, the location, and the dates you worked there. Underneath, use 2-4 bullet points to describe your accomplishments, not just your duties. Use strong action verbs. Instead of “Responsible for managing the office,” say “Managed daily office operations, including scheduling and vendor communications.”
What about all that experience from before? You don’t want to pretend it doesn’t exist. A simple and elegant solution is to add a final, brief entry at the end of this section without dates. It can be titled “Previous Professional Experience” or “Early Career.” Here, you can write a single sentence: “Early career includes progressive roles in project management and marketing for Fortune 500 companies.” This acknowledges your extensive history without getting bogged down in irrelevant details from the 1980s.
The key is to translate your high-level experience into the practical skills needed for the part-time job. A former Vice President of Operations has deep experience in “budgeting,” “logistics,” and “team management.” For a job managing the stockroom at a local hardware store, you reframe those skills as “inventory control,” “efficient workflow planning,” and “training new staff.”
Education: Short and Sweet
This section goes at the bottom. As mentioned, list your degree and the university. That’s it. No graduation date. If you have any recent and relevant certifications—perhaps a Master Gardener certification for a nursery job—you can list them here as well.