TL;DR — What to learn first
Start here: BLS, ACLS, one EHR system (Epic or Cerner), and the clinical competencies for your target unit. These show up in over 85% of hospital RN postings.
Level up: Add a specialty certification (CCRN, CEN, CNOR, PCCN), charge nurse or preceptor experience, and proficiency in specific clinical procedures relevant to your unit.
What matters most: Specialty gates hiring more than years of experience. A nurse with CCRN and 3 years of ICU experience will be hired over one with 10 years of med-surg for a MICU role.
What registered nurse job postings actually ask for
Before learning anything, look at the data. Here’s how often key skills appear in registered nurse job postings:
Skill frequency in registered nurse job postings
Certifications
The gold-standard certification for ICU nurses, administered by AACN. Validates competency in caring for critically ill adults. Required or strongly preferred for MICU, SICU, CVICU, and neuro ICU positions at academic medical centers.
Put CCRN right after your name: “Rachel Nguyen, BSN, RN, CCRN.” Also list it in your certifications section. Double placement ensures it is found by both human reviewers and ATS systems.
AHA certification required for nearly all hospital RN positions. Covers cardiac arrest algorithms, stroke protocols, and advanced airway management. Renewal every 2 years.
List ACLS in your certifications line. It is a baseline expectation — not having it listed will raise questions.
AHA or Red Cross CPR certification. The most basic requirement for any clinical nursing role. Must be current at time of hire.
Always list it. Include the issuing body (AHA or Red Cross) and expiration year if space allows.
Required for emergency department, PICU, NICU, and any unit that may treat pediatric patients. Increasingly expected in ED and float pool roles.
List it if you hold it, even for adult-focused roles. PALS signals breadth and is a differentiator for ED and float pool applications.
Clinical skills
Setting and adjusting mechanical ventilation parameters, monitoring waveforms, and collaborating with respiratory therapy on weaning protocols. Core competency for all ICU RN roles.
Name it explicitly: “Managed ventilator settings and weaning protocols for mechanically ventilated patients.” Generic “ICU care” does not communicate the same competency.
Titrating vasopressors (norepinephrine, vasopressin, phenylephrine) and inotropes (dobutamine, milrinone) based on hemodynamic parameters. A core ICU skill that requires continuous monitoring and clinical judgment.
Name the specific drips you have titrated: “Titrated norepinephrine, vasopressin, and dobutamine per ICU protocol.”
Managing continuous dialysis for critically ill patients with acute kidney injury. Includes circuit setup, fluid balance calculations, and troubleshooting. A differentiating skill for MICU and SICU roles.
Quantify: “Managed CRRT for 3–5 patients per week with zero circuit-clotting events.”
Situation-Background-Assessment-Recommendation handoff framework. The standard for nurse-to-nurse, nurse-to-physician, and rapid response communication in hospitals.
Reference SBAR in a rapid response or handoff bullet: “Used SBAR handoff to the rapid response team within 60 seconds of clinical deterioration.”
EHR systems
The dominant hospital EHR. RNs use Epic for medication administration (Rover/BCMA), flowsheet documentation, care plans, orders, and patient communication. “Epic power user” is a legitimate differentiator in RN hiring.
Name the Epic modules you use: “Epic power user (Rover, SmartPhrases, flowsheets, medication administration).” Module-level specificity signals real fluency.
The second-most-common hospital EHR, now Oracle Health. Similar workflow to Epic but different interface. If you have used both, list both — EHR versatility is a positive signal.
List Cerner if you have used it. If you have both Epic and Cerner experience, name both.
How to list registered nurse skills on your resume
Don’t dump a wall of keywords. Categorize your skills to mirror how job postings list their requirements:
Example: Registered Nurse Resume
Why this works: The Certifications line is the first thing a nurse recruiter scans. BSN, RN, and specialty certifications (CCRN, CEN, CNOR) are the search terms that determine whether your resume gets read or filtered out.
Three rules for your skills section:
- Only list what you’ve used in a real project. If you can’t answer a technical question about it, don’t list it.
- Match the job posting’s terminology. If they use a specific tool name, use that exact name on your resume.
- Order by relevance, not alphabetically. Put the most important skills first in each category.
What to learn first (and in what order)
If you’re looking to break into registered nurse roles, here’s the highest-ROI learning path for 2026:
BSN + NCLEX
Complete a BSN program (or ADN with BSN bridge plan). Pass the NCLEX-RN. Get BLS and ACLS certified before starting your first job. The BSN is increasingly the minimum for hospital hiring, especially at Magnet-designated facilities.
New grad residency + unit orientation
Most hospitals offer 12–16 week new grad residency programs. This is where you learn the EHR, the unit workflow, and the clinical procedures specific to your floor. Take this period seriously — it is the fastest learning you will do in your career.
Specialty certification
After 2 years on your unit, sit for the specialty certification: CCRN for ICU, CEN for ED, CNOR for OR, PCCN for step-down. Certification is the single biggest differentiator in RN hiring and is often required for clinical ladder advancement.
Charge nurse + preceptor
Volunteer for charge nurse shifts and preceptor assignments. These are the leadership experiences that open the door to clinical educator, NP program, or CRNA track. Document your metrics: bed-turnover compliance, new grad retention, competency pass rates.
Advanced practice preparation
If your goal is NP, CRNA, or CNS, start building your application portfolio: clinical hours log, precepting experience, research or quality improvement projects, and strong recommendation letters from charge nurses and nurse managers.