Vertex Resume Template

Clean dual-column resume for engineers who ship.

A dark header band, green accent, lowercase code-comment section labels, and proportional skill bars in a two-column layout — engineer-pragmatic and built for software, platform, DevOps, and data engineers from IC to tech lead.

$ whoami
Alex Johnson
Senior Software Engineer · Full-Stack & Platforms
mail="alex.johnson@email.com"phone="+1 (555) 123-4567"location="San Francisco, CA"link="linkedin.com/in/alexjohnson"site="alexjohnson.dev"
AJ
/**
Results-driven software engineer with 5+ years of experience building scalable web applications. Proficient in React, TypeScript, and Node.js. Passionate about creating clean, maintainable code and delivering exceptional user experiences.
*/
//

Education

University of California, Berkeley
Bachelor's, Computer Science
Aug 2015 - May 2019 · GPA 3.7
//

Skills

JavaScript
TypeScript
React
Node.js
Python
SQL
Git
Docker
AWS
REST APIs
GraphQL
Agile/Scrum
//

Certifications

AWS Solutions Architect Associate · Amazon Web Services · Mar 2023
//

Experience

Senior Software Engineer
TechCorp Inc.·San Francisco, CA
Jan 2022 - Present
  • Led development of customer-facing dashboard serving 50K+ daily users
  • Reduced page load time by 40% through code splitting and lazy loading
  • Mentored 3 junior developers and conducted weekly code reviews
  • Implemented CI/CD pipeline reducing deployment time from 2 hours to 15 minutes
Software Engineer
StartupXYZ·Remote
Jun 2019 - Dec 2021
  • Built RESTful APIs using Node.js and Express serving 1M+ requests/day
  • Developed responsive React components used across 5 product lines
  • Collaborated with design team to implement pixel-perfect UI from Figma mockups
  • Wrote comprehensive unit and integration tests achieving 90% code coverage
//

Achievements

Employee of the YearJun 2023
Recognized for outstanding contributions to the engineering team and delivering critical projects ahead of schedule.
Hackathon WinnerSep 2022
First place at TechCorp internal hackathon for building an AI-powered code review tool.
//

Projects

Open Source Component Librarygithub.com/alexjohnson/ui-kit
React, TypeScript, Storybook, Rollup
Created and maintained a React component library with 500+ GitHub stars, used by 50+ projects.
Real-time Chat Application
Node.js, Socket.io, Redis, React
Built a scalable real-time messaging app supporting 10K concurrent users with WebSocket connections.
//

Languages

English
Native
Spanish
Conversational

The Vertex resume template is built the way good engineers build interfaces: nothing on the page that doesn't earn its place. A dark header band anchors your name and contact line, a green #16a34a accent marks structure without shouting, and section labels read as lowercase code comments — // experience, // skills, // projects. A left sidebar holds the at-a-glance details so the main column stays clear for the work that proves you can ship.

It's the default pick for software, platform, DevOps, hardware, and data engineers — individual contributors and tech leads who want a resume that signals craft without decoration. The proportional skill bars give a quick read on your stack; the // lowercase labels feel native to anyone who lives in a terminal. Vertex reads as practical and current, which is precisely the tone an engineering team wants before they've opened a single bullet.

Design traits

Font

Sans-serif body with monospaced lowercase section labels

Layout

Two-column: left sidebar (skills/stack/certs) + main, dark header band

Accent

Green (#16a34a)

About the Vertex template

Vertex is built the way engineers build interfaces: nothing on the page that doesn't earn its place. A dark header band anchors the name and contact line, a single green accent marks structure without shouting, and section labels read as lowercase code comments. A left sidebar carries the at-a-glance details (stack, tooling, certs) so the main column stays clear for the systems built and problems solved. Proportional skill bars give a fast read on depth across the stack, and the whole layout stays calm enough that quantified, specific bullets do the talking. It reads as practical and current — the tone an engineering team wants before opening a single line.

Who uses the Vertex template

Vertex fits engineers across the stack who measure themselves by what they ship — backend and full-stack developers, platform and infrastructure engineers, DevOps and SRE, embedded and hardware engineers, and data engineers building pipelines. It spans levels cleanly, from a strong mid-level IC through a staff engineer or tech lead with a team to show. The sidebar carries the stack, certs, and tooling; the main column carries the systems built and problems solved. Reach for it when you want an engineer-pragmatic page with zero fluff.

Representative roles

  • Software Engineer / Senior Software Engineer
  • Platform / Infrastructure Engineer
  • DevOps Engineer / Site Reliability Engineer
  • Data Engineer / Pipeline Engineer
  • Embedded / Hardware Engineer
  • Staff Engineer / Tech Lead

Best for

  • Software and full-stack engineers
  • Platform and infrastructure engineers
  • DevOps engineers and SREs
  • Data engineers and pipeline engineers
  • Embedded and hardware engineers
  • Staff engineers and tech leads

Skip it if

  • Non-technical roles (sales, HR, finance) where the code-comment styling reads as niche
  • Conservative industries like law or banking where Classic or Executive carries more weight
  • Aggressive single-column-only ATS portals — use a single-column template or submit the .docx

When to use the Vertex template

Pick Vertex when you want an engineer-pragmatic resume with zero fluff — for software, platform, DevOps, hardware, and data engineering roles across levels, from a strong mid-level IC to a staff engineer or tech lead. The sidebar holds a deep stack and the main column gives room for impact and scope, so it scales from first real role to senior leadership. Skip it for non-technical roles where the comment styling reads as niche, and for conservative industries where a serif template signals more convention. As a dual-column design, submit the single-column .docx whenever an application funnels through an aggressive ATS before a human sees it.

Still deciding? Every template in our catalog is ATS-tested and passes the major applicant tracking systems. Switch between any of our designs with a single click in the editor — your content stays the same.

Customising the Vertex template

Small tweaks that signal craft without breaking ATS parsing.

1. Keep the green accent disciplined — structure, not decoration

The default #16a34a green is tuned to mark section labels and the sidebar without competing with your bullets. Resist the urge to colour body text, dates, or company names; the accent works because it's scarce. If you have a real brand reason, you can nudge the green toward a calmer or deeper shade, but keep it as a single structural colour — two accents turn an engineering page into a dashboard.

2. Set proportional skill bars to reflect real depth

The bars are proportional for a reason: they let a reviewer rank your stack in one glance. Fill them by what you'd be comfortable owning in production — a full bar for the language you write daily, a shorter one for the tool you've used on one project. Don't max everything; a strip where every bar is full tells the reader nothing and reads as padding rather than signal.

3. Use the dark header band as a frame, not a billboard

The dark band gives your name weight and separates the header from the body cleanly. Keep what sits inside it tight — name, role, and a single contact line (email · GitHub · city). Cramming a portfolio URL, a personal site, and three social links into the band makes it look busy and undercuts the clean engineer-tool feel. Pick the one link that best backs up the role.

4. Let the // comment labels carry the sectioning

The // lowercase labels are the template's signature — they read as native to engineers and keep the page calm. Don't reach for bold rules, boxes, or uppercase headings on top of them; the comment style already does the structural work. Keep your own custom sections in the same lowercase-comment voice (// open source, // certifications) so the page stays consistent end to end.

Common pitfalls when using Vertex

Specific failure modes for this template (different from generic resume mistakes).

1. Stuffing the sidebar with every tool you have ever touched

The sidebar makes long skill lists easy to drop in, which is exactly the trap. A sidebar packed with forty technologies reads as a keyword dump and buries the eight that matter for the role. Curate to the stack the posting actually wants, and let depth — shown by the proportional bars — say more than breadth.

2. Assuming two columns clear every ATS the same way

Vertex is dual-column, so it scores 3/5 on parsing. Modern applicant tracking systems handle it, but stricter or older parsers can read the columns out of order or miss the sidebar entirely. When a job routes through an aggressive ATS, submit the single-column .docx — Vertex collapses to one column in Word specifically to stay parser-safe.

3. Writing vague bullets that the clean layout exposes

Vertex's restraint is unforgiving of filler — there's no visual noise to hide behind, so a bullet like 'responsible for backend services' sits naked on the page. The layout rewards specifics: what you built, the scale it ran at, the latency or cost you moved. Bring quantified outcomes or the clean design works against you.

Vertex resume template FAQ

Is the Vertex resume template ATS-safe?
Vertex is a two-column layout, so it scores an honest 3/5 on ATS parsing. Its reading order and plain-text content parse correctly in current systems like Greenhouse, Lever, and Ashby, but the dual-column structure is inherently less parser-friendly than a single column — older or stricter screeners may read columns out of sequence or skip the sidebar. The safeguard is built in: VitaeKit's Vertex .docx export flattens to a single column for maximum ATS safety. Send the PDF when an engineer or recruiter reviews it directly, and submit the .docx when the application clearly funnels through automated screening first.
What jobs is the Vertex resume template best for?
Software engineering across the stack, platform and infrastructure, DevOps and SRE, data engineering, and embedded or hardware roles — individual contributors and tech leads alike. The // lowercase labels and proportional skill bars are tuned to feel native to engineers and to read fast for technical reviewers. It's less suited to non-technical roles (sales, HR, finance) where the code-comment styling reads as niche, and to conservative industries like law or banking where Classic or Executive carries more conventional weight.
Does Vertex work for a senior or staff engineer resume?
Yes — Vertex scales up well. The sidebar comfortably holds a deep stack, leadership tooling, and certifications while the main column gives room to describe systems owned, teams led, and architecture decisions made. For staff and tech-lead applications, lean the main column toward impact and scope rather than line-by-line tasks, and use the skill bars to show the breadth a senior IC is expected to cover. If your record runs long, Vertex extends cleanly to a second page without losing its structure.
Should I keep all the skill bars filled to the top?
No. The proportional bars exist to communicate real differences in depth, and a technical interviewer will test the claim. Give a full bar only to the languages and tools you'd happily debug under pressure, medium fills to solid working knowledge, and shorter ones to things you're still learning. A calibrated strip reads as honest engineering self-assessment — the same disciplined judgment a hiring team hopes you'll bring to estimating, scoping, and code review.
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