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Resume Skills Section Generator

Enter your skill scores and target role — get a professionally worded skills section you can copy directly into your resume or CV.

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What Makes a Strong Skills Section

Most hiring managers spend 6–8 seconds scanning a resume before deciding whether to read further. A clear, specific skills section with actual numbers (WPM, accuracy percentages) stands out compared to generic claims like "fast typist" or "computer literate."

✓ Strong Example

"English typing speed: 42 WPM with 96% accuracy. Proficient in alphanumeric data entry at 8,500 KPH."

✗ Weak Example

"Good typing speed. Familiar with computers. Quick learner."

Tips for Presenting Digital Skills on Your Resume

Use specific numbers: "42 WPM" is far more credible than "fast typing." Recruiters can instantly compare it against their requirements.
Match the job posting format: If the job ad says "minimum 8,000 KPH," use KPH in your resume — not WPM. Use the converter tool above if needed.
Mention accuracy alongside speed: Speed without accuracy context is incomplete. "42 WPM at 96% accuracy" tells the full story.
Include software proficiency: If you are proficient in MS Excel, Tally, or any data entry software — list it. These complement your typing metrics.

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