Product Manager Resume Template

A template built for PMs who ship products, not just manage backlogs — structured to showcase the user research, data-driven prioritization, cross-functional leadership, and measurable business outcomes that top tech companies hire for.

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Maya Patel
maya.patel@email.com | (415) 555-0147 | linkedin.com/in/mayapatel-pm
Summary

Senior product manager with 6 years of experience shipping payment and commerce products at scale. Currently leading Stripe’s checkout optimization team, where a redesigned payment flow increased merchant conversion by 14% and drove $38M in incremental annual processing volume. Combines deep user research instincts with rigorous experimentation and a track record of aligning engineering, design, and go-to-market teams around outcomes, not outputs.

Experience
Senior Product Manager
Stripe San Francisco, CA
  • Led the end-to-end redesign of Stripe Checkout’s payment flow, defining the product vision through 40+ merchant interviews, writing the PRD, and shipping a 3-phase rollout that increased conversion by 14% and drove $38M in incremental annual processing volume
  • Built and owned the experimentation roadmap for the checkout team, launching 18 A/B tests in 6 months that collectively improved NPS from 42 to 57 among mid-market merchants
  • Defined OKRs for a cross-functional team of 8 engineers, 2 designers, and a data scientist, aligning quarterly priorities with Stripe’s company-level goal of expanding upmarket merchant adoption by 20%
Product Manager
Notion New York, NY
  • Owned the Notion Templates marketplace from 0–1, conducting 60+ user research sessions to identify creator needs, then shipping a submission and review pipeline that grew the marketplace to 5,000+ templates and 2M monthly active users within 18 months
  • Designed a data-driven prioritization framework using SQL-based funnel analysis that replaced gut-feel roadmap planning, reducing feature cycle time by 30% and increasing the team’s quarterly shipped feature count from 4 to 7
  • Partnered with the growth team to launch an onboarding experiment that reduced Day-7 churn by 22%, contributing to a $4.1M lift in annual recurring revenue from the self-serve segment
Skills

Product: Roadmap Planning, PRDs, OKRs, User Research, A/B Testing, Funnel Analysis, Data-Driven Prioritization   Technical: SQL (intermediate), Amplitude, Mixpanel, Figma, Jira, Linear   Methods: Jobs-to-be-Done, RICE Scoring, Customer Journey Mapping, Competitive Analysis

Education
B.S. Computer Science
Georgia Institute of Technology

What makes a strong product manager resume

Lead with outcomes, not activities

The most common mistake on PM resumes is describing what you did instead of what happened because of what you did. “Managed the roadmap for the payments team” tells a hiring manager nothing about your effectiveness. “Led the checkout redesign that increased merchant conversion by 14% and drove $38M in incremental processing volume” tells them everything. Every bullet should answer the question: what changed in the business because this PM was in the room? If your bullets stop at the activity — “wrote PRDs,” “ran standups,” “coordinated with engineering” — you’re describing a project coordinator, not a product manager.

Show the full PM arc: research to shipping to measurement

Strong PM resumes demonstrate the complete product development cycle. You identified a problem through user research or data analysis, defined the solution in a PRD, aligned a cross-functional team, shipped incrementally, and measured the outcome. Maya’s Stripe bullet does exactly this: “40+ merchant interviews” (research), “writing the PRD” (definition), “3-phase rollout” (execution), “14% conversion increase” (measurement). When a hiring manager sees that arc, they know you can own a product end-to-end, not just fill in Jira tickets.

Quantify your cross-functional leverage

PMs don’t write code or push pixels. Their leverage comes from aligning teams around the right problems. But “worked with engineering and design” is invisible on a resume. Instead, specify the team composition and scope: “Defined OKRs for a cross-functional team of 8 engineers, 2 designers, and a data scientist.” Name the stakeholders you influenced, the teams you aligned, and the organizational outcomes that resulted. The best PM resumes make the coordination visible by showing team size, number of stakeholders, and the scope of the decision your alignment enabled.

User research is a differentiator — show the volume and the method

Most PM resumes mention user research in passing. The ones that stand out quantify it. “Conducted 60+ user research sessions” signals rigor. It tells the hiring manager you didn’t just read a few support tickets and call it research — you ran a structured, high-volume discovery process. If you’ve done Jobs-to-be-Done interviews, contextual inquiries, usability tests, or survey-driven segmentation, name the method. PMs who can articulate how they learn from users — not just that they do — are in a different category entirely.

Key skills for product manager resumes

Include the ones you actually practice. Drop the ones you’d fumble in an interview.

Technical Skills

Roadmap Planning PRDs OKRs User Research A/B Testing SQL Data-Driven Prioritization Amplitude Mixpanel Figma Jira Linear

What PM Interviews Focus On

Product Sense Execution & Prioritization Metrics & Analytics Cross-Functional Leadership Strategic Thinking Customer Empathy Technical Communication Stakeholder Management Trade-off Analysis Go-to-Market Strategy

Recommended template for product manager roles

Professional resume template preview

Professional

For product manager roles, the Professional template is the right choice. Its Palatino serif font and structured layout project the strategic clarity and attention to detail that PM hiring managers expect. The clean hierarchy ensures your impact metrics and cross-functional scope are easy to scan — and PMs get about 6 seconds of attention before a recruiter decides whether to keep reading. Professional, credible, and built for people who ship outcomes.

Use this template

Frequently asked questions

Should I include technical skills like SQL on a PM resume?
Yes, if you actually use them. PMs who can pull their own data, write basic queries, and interpret experiment results without waiting on an analyst are significantly more effective — and hiring managers know it. List SQL, Python, or any analytics tool you genuinely use in your day-to-day work. But don’t list skills you’d struggle to demonstrate in an interview. A PM who claims SQL proficiency but can’t write a JOIN is worse off than one who doesn’t list it at all.
How do I show impact when I wasn’t the one writing code?
PMs don’t ship code — they ship outcomes. Your resume should reflect that. Instead of “managed a team of 6 engineers,” write “led a cross-functional team of 6 engineers and 2 designers to launch a checkout optimization that increased conversion by 14% and drove $2.3M in incremental annual revenue.” You defined the problem, prioritized the solution, aligned the team, and measured the result. That’s the PM contribution — own it without overclaiming the technical execution.
Is it better to show breadth or depth on a PM resume?
Depth wins at the senior level. Early-career PMs can get away with showing range — a little growth, a little platform, a little ops tooling. But once you’re targeting senior PM or Lead PM roles, hiring managers want to see that you’ve gone deep in a domain. They want someone who understands the nuances of payments infrastructure, or developer tools, or marketplace dynamics — not someone who’s done a little of everything. Pick your strongest domain and make it the throughline of your resume.

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