A clean template built for entry-level analytics roles — designed to showcase SQL skills, dashboard building, and the ability to turn messy data into business insights, even when your professional experience is still early.
Tailor yours nowData analyst with internship experience building dashboards and automating reports for business teams. Interned at HubSpot where I built a customer churn analysis dashboard that identified $2.1M in at-risk revenue and helped the retention team reduce quarterly churn by 15%. Strong foundation in SQL, Python, and Tableau with a focus on translating data into actionable recommendations.
Tools: SQL, Python (pandas, matplotlib), Excel (VLOOKUP, pivot tables, macros), Tableau, Google Sheets, R (basics) Databases: PostgreSQL, BigQuery Methods: Data cleaning, exploratory analysis, A/B test analysis, regression, data visualization
Data analyst hiring managers aren’t impressed by how complex your query was — they want to know what happened because of your analysis. “Wrote a SQL query with 4 joins” is a technical description. “Identified $2.1M in at-risk revenue by analyzing customer usage patterns, leading to a retention campaign that reduced churn by 15%” is a business outcome. Every bullet should connect your analysis to a decision someone made or a result that followed. If your analysis didn’t lead to anything, it’s harder to sell on a resume — focus on the work that actually moved the needle.
A lot of junior analysts feel pressure to lead with Python or SQL and hide their Excel skills. Don’t. Excel is still the most-used analytics tool in business, and proficiency with pivot tables, VLOOKUP, INDEX/MATCH, and basic macros is a genuine skill that many junior candidates lack. If you automated a reporting workflow in Excel that saved someone hours per week, that’s a legitimate resume bullet. The goal isn’t to seem as technical as possible — it’s to show that you can get answers from data using whatever tool fits the situation.
The strongest junior analyst bullets show the complete arc: what the data looked like when you got it, what you did to clean and analyze it, and what insight or recommendation came out. “Cleaned a dataset of 500K survey responses, standardized missing fields, and identified three predictors of purchase intent that informed the client’s Q4 marketing strategy” shows you can handle the messy reality of data work — not just the polished dashboard at the end.
Listing “built a Tableau dashboard” is like listing “wrote a document.” What was the dashboard about? Who used it? What did it show them that they didn’t know before? “Built a customer segmentation dashboard in Tableau that revealed high-value users were 3x more likely to upgrade after engaging with the knowledge base” gives the hiring manager a reason to care. The tool is just the delivery mechanism — the insight is what matters.
Include the ones you actually have. Leave out the ones you’d struggle to discuss in an interview.
For data analyst roles, the Professional template is a strong choice. Its clean Palatino serif font and generous spacing give your resume a polished, business-friendly look that resonates with the hiring managers and business stakeholders who typically review analyst applications. It signals professionalism without the technical austerity of a pure engineering resume.
Use this templateTurquoise builds a tailored, ATS-friendly resume for any analytics role in minutes — even entry-level positions. It highlights your SQL skills, dashboard work, and business impact in the format that analytics teams expect.
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