
Most job seekers think of their resume and LinkedIn profile as two separate documents. Recruiters don't. When they receive your resume, the first thing many do is search for your LinkedIn profile. What they find there either reinforces or undermines what's on your resume. In 2026, alignment between the two is more important than ever — here's how to get it right.
If your resume says you were a "Senior Marketing Manager" at a company from 2020–2023 but your LinkedIn says "Marketing Lead" at the same company, a recruiter notices. If your resume claims you led a team of 10 but your LinkedIn description says nothing about management, they question whether it's accurate. These inconsistencies don't necessarily mean you're dishonest — but they create doubt, and in a competitive hiring market, doubt is enough to move on to the next candidate.
Your LinkedIn can and should contain more than your resume. LinkedIn allows longer descriptions, multimedia, recommendations, endorsements, and content you've published. Your resume is a curated highlight reel — LinkedIn is the fuller story. The key is that nothing on your resume should contradict what's on LinkedIn.
Your LinkedIn headline (the line under your name) is the most visible part of your profile. It should reflect the same positioning as your resume summary — your current or target role, your domain, and a key differentiator. If your resume summary says you're a "Data Analyst with 4 years in e-commerce analytics", your LinkedIn headline shouldn't say "Aspiring professional seeking opportunities". See 10 Resume Summary Examples That Actually Work for inspiration.
Your LinkedIn skills section should broadly match your resume skills section — especially the top 10 skills. LinkedIn's algorithm weights endorsed skills in search results, so ask colleagues to endorse the skills most relevant to your target role. For guidance on which skills to prioritize, see Essential Skills You Must Add to Your 2026 Resume.
Open your resume and LinkedIn side by side. Check every job title, every date, every company, and your education. Fix any mismatches. Then update your LinkedIn headline and summary to reflect your resume's positioning. Finally, run your resume through CV Chackr to make sure it's keyword-matched for your target role — then mirror those keywords in your LinkedIn About section too.
Get your resume ATS-ready with CV Chackr, then align your LinkedIn to match — free.
Check My Resume →