
Hiring in 2026 won’t look much like hiring even two years ago. If you don’t pay attention, you will get left behind. I was a retained search consultant for 25-plus years. I’ve written executive and board résumés for the last 10 years. I’ve never seen so much change in candidate sourcing happen so quickly.
CEO priorities and expectations have shifted. AI is reshaping how candidates get surfaced. Résumé sameness has skyrocketed. Candidate shortlist cycles have accelerated.
For you to be visible, your résumé has to do more than describe your work. It has to hit leaders’ priorities, satisfy automated systems’ tests, and make sense. The following five trends show you what that means and how to stay ahead of it:
Trend 1: Résumé Content Must Address CEO Priorities
Late-2025 surveys found four top-of-mind priorities for CEOs as we head into 2026. Those topics map to compelling information for your résumé’s experience section. I list them below. Then, I frame the question that decision-makers want your résumé to answer. Finally, to inspire you, I share examples of subjects you might use in impact bullets.
CEO Priority: AI Adoption & Transformation
The question: Can this person operationalize AI and meet ROI hurdles?
Impact Examples:
- Introduced AI-assisted steps into a workflow.
- Led a cross-functional effort to apply AI to a core business process.
- Built an AI governance framework.
CEO Priority: Geopolitical & Economic Uncertainty
The question: Can this person make decisions that protect shareholder value during volatility?
Impact Examples:
- Used business intelligence tools to identify and report risks.
- Redesigned a process to protect profit margins.
- Repositioned the organization in response to geopolitical, regulatory, or economic shifts.
CEO Priority: Talent Management
The question: Can this person shape and prepare our teams for an AI future?
Impact Examples:
- Implemented AI-driven talent sourcing methods.
- Adopted the 4B workforce model (buy, build, borrow, bot) to design a future-ready team.
- Owned the talent workstream for enterprise AI adoption.
CEO Priority: Business Model Reinvention
The question: Can this person drive adaptation and growth to keep us competitive?
Impact Examples:
- Contributed insights that improved a product, service, or customer experience.
- Developed or scaled a new offering.
- Determined where the organization should invest, expand, or exit to maintain long-term viability.
Trend 2: The Rise of the Reader Trio (ATS, AI, Human)
For years, you’ve written for applicant tracking systems, recruiters, and hiring managers. And you still will. But in 2026, more organizations will use AI to source candidates and expand talent pools. While an Applicant Tracking System (ATS) looks for keywords, AI looks for patterns.
To benefit from AI’s ability to expand talent pools, you’ll need to learn those patterns and embed them in your résumé. Examples include: showing you’re ready for promotion to the next level; writing about repeated records of success; and describing challenges you’ve handled that also exist in other industries.
Trend 3: Work Context Becomes Critical
Beyond CEO concerns, your trio of readers wants to know where you’ve operated. If you haven’t already, now is the time to add company descriptions to your résumé. Basics include size, ownership, industry, footprint, and systemic challenges. Readers need to see adjacencies to their worlds to predict your effectiveness.
Trend 4: Generic, AI-Written Résumés
Next, I talked with many recruiters over a few days at the Unleash World HR conference in Paris in October. I wanted to learn how they use AI to find people. They wanted to talk about the crushing tsunami of generic résumés they receive.
While AI might up-level a bad résumé to average, always keep a human in the loop to stand out. Make it yours. Otherwise, your readers’ eyes will glaze over from the sameness. Plus, AI continues to generate word salad and logical inconsistencies. The narrative sounds good on the surface, but it doesn’t hold up to scrutiny. Recruiters catch those faux pas, so don’t make them.
Trend 5: Candidate Shortlist Velocity and Résumé Readiness
Finally, a Siemens recruiter claims that LinkedIn’s AI cut his time-to-shortlist by at least 20 times. That means an accelerated recruiting cycle, with prepared candidates getting first looks. If you need time to update your résumé, you might get left behind.
Career visibility in 2026 won’t happen by accident. It will be because you built a résumé that meets the moment: substantive, AI-savvy, and ready before anyone asks for it.



