Booz Allen, Raytheon, and major banks filter security candidates through ATS
A missing CISSP designation or unparsed clearance level eliminates qualified analysts before any human review.
Verify your CISSP, SIEM tool keywords, and clearance levels parse through enterprise and government ATS.
Upload your resume for a free ATS-optimized version. Add a job description to also get a match analysis and targeted cover letter. Only your email is required.
Checks how defense contractors, financial institutions, and enterprise security teams parse your credentials, SIEM tools, and clearance information. See how Resume Optimizer Pro works →
Certifications in a standard section, SIEM keywords aligned to the description, clearance formatted for reliable parsing, single-column layout.
A missing CISSP designation or unparsed clearance level eliminates qualified analysts before any human review.
If the full credential name is missing from parsed text, your application may be rated ineligible automatically.
General SIEM experience without naming the specific platform returns a zero match score.
Defense contractors typically use Taleo, Workday, or iCIMS. Cybersecurity firms often use Greenhouse or Lever. Government agencies may use USA Staffing or Monster Government Solutions. Resume Optimizer Pro checks against the parsing standards that underlie all of these platforms.
List each certification by full name in a dedicated Certifications section: Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP), Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH), CompTIA Security+. Include issuing organization and date earned.
Place your clearance level in the main document body, not in a header or footer. Use the standard designation (Top Secret/SCI, Top Secret, Secret) and include the granting agency. It must appear as selectable plain text.
Include exact tool names from the job description: Splunk, CrowdStrike Falcon, SentinelOne, Palo Alto Networks, Carbon Black, Wireshark, Nessus, Qualys, Tenable, Snort, Elastic SIEM, and Microsoft Sentinel. List each in a Skills or Tools section.
Yes. NIST Cybersecurity Framework, MITRE ATT&CK, ISO 27001, SOC 2, and CIS Controls are frequently used as keyword filters. List every framework you have applied in a Skills section.
Common causes: certification names listed only as abbreviations, SIEM tool names absent from resume text, clearance in headers or footers that parsers skip, framework references missing from skills, and two-column layouts that scramble content.
Free templates tested against Workday, Greenhouse, and iCIMS. Every section recognized by enterprise and government ATS parsers.
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