The Resume Template To Get Hired For A $100,000+ Job In 2026
A few months ago, I sat down with a client who was fed up. She was tired of the rigidity of her current role, craving full remote flexibility, and knew she was undervalued financially. She wanted a change, but her resume wasn't getting her in the door.
We identified exactly what was blocking her. We revamped her approach to focus on tangible value rather than daily duties.
Fast forward to today: She messaged me on LinkedIn with the news every career coach loves to hear. *"Rachel, I've got the job! Fully remote and a pay rise."*
Considering the average salary for her role hovers around six figures, her pay rise meant she had officially crossed the $100,000 mark.
While I was thrilled for her, the experience reinforced a critical truth I've discovered while consulting for clients and revamping my own resume for leadership promotions: **There is a science to the perfect resume.**
If you Google "resume templates," you will find endless conflicting advice from influencers and self-styled experts. Some is correct; much of it is overhyped. However, after reviewing countless resumes for high-salaried roles, I've found a common thread among the winners.
The best resumes for high-salaried roles do one thing exceptionally well: **They prove you can own outcomes, not just execute a list of tasks.**
Why Most Resumes Fail to Land High-Paying Roles
When clients tell me they are struggling to land interviews or get introductions to desired employers, I usually see the same three issues immediately:
1. **There is no evidence of impact.**
2. **There are no credible results.**
3. **The positioning is passive.** (You appear to be receiving responsibility rather than initiating change).
When you craft your resume, you have one job: **Make it immediately obvious to the recruiter and Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) how you create value for their business.**
Unfortunately, value creation often gets lost when candidates:
* Hide behind safe phrases like *"assisted," "responsible for,"* or *"helped."*
* Use generic AI-generated fluff that conveys no substance.
* Miss clear, concise language and tangible metrics.
To land a high-salary role, you must upgrade your thinking. You need to talk like an owner. This is especially true for remote roles where initiative and self-motivation are currency.
Target Roles for This Strategy
This approach is designed for leadership, management, and high-impact Individual Contributor (IC) expert roles. Consider the average salaries for these positions:
* **Business Analyst:** ~$111,430
* **Data Scientist:** ~$118,406
* **Agile Coach / Scrum Master:** ~$111,835
* **Sales Manager:** ~$126,437
* **Project Manager:** ~$146,918
* **Head of Operations:** ~$200,606
* **Senior Accounts Director:** ~$205,941
* **Senior IT Leader / CTO:** ~$309,418
If you are aiming for these brackets, you need a resume that matches the level of investment the company is making in you.
The Hybrid Resume Template for Six-Figure Roles
For executive-level and senior management roles, I recommend a **Hybrid (Combination) Resume Format**. This combines a specialised skills section with your work history in reverse chronological order. It is optimised for ATS compliance while highlighting your expertise immediately.
Here is the step-by-step structure:
1. Contact Information
Start with your name in title case. Follow this with:
* Email address.
* Contact number.
* LinkedIn profile URL (hyperlinked). *Note: At this level, an optimised LinkedIn profile is mandatory.*
* City and State.
* Availability status (e.g., "Available for Hybrid or Remote Work").
2. Portfolio Link
If you have a portfolio, website, or GitHub repository, include the link here.
3. Professional Summary
This paragraph should be no more than **five lines**. Written in the third person, it must concisely highlight:
* Your level of expertise.
* Years of experience.
* Industry specificity (e.g., *"Operations Director in B2B startups covering the APAC region"* rather than just *"Operations Director"*).
* **Metrics:** Quantify one or two achievements immediately (e.g., *"Delivered $300m in cost savings"*).
4. Skills Section
This is crucial for ATS matching.
* Highlight skills specific to the job advert's person specification.
* **Use exact terminology** from the job description to match keywords.
* Include AI-specific skills and remote work experience if relevant.
* **Tailor this section every time you apply.**
5. Experience / Employment Section
Employers do not care about what you *did*; they want to know what your *impact* was. Detail your achievements in concise bullet points. Demonstrate impact by referencing:
* Scope and budget size.
* Headcount managed.
* Teams collaborated with.
* Increases in sales revenue or profit turnover.
* Costs reduced.
* Compliance targets achieved (vital for regulated industries).
* KPIs exceeded or delivered within time.
**Rule:** Each bullet point should be **no more than two lines long**. Do not write paragraphs.
6. The 10-15 Year Rule
Only go back to the last 10-15 years of work experience. Anything beyond that is generally irrelevant and can pose a risk of age discrimination. Abbreviate older roles or leave them out entirely.
7. Education and Certifications
List your degrees, but focus heavily on **professional development certifications**.
* Highlight applied AI certifications.
* List industry-specific courses like PMP or CISSP.
* These make you a competitive candidate and strengthen your hand during pay negotiations.
8. Length Constraint
**No more than two pages.** Seniority does not grant permission to write a novel. Concise is a leadership skill.
A Note on Using AI
You can use AI to speed up this process, but **never allow it to replace your voice.**
* Do not allow AI to state dishonest claims.
* Watch out for redundancy (AI tends to repeat bullet points in slightly different ways).
* Avoid "AI slop"—generic, fluffy language that sounds impressive but means nothing.
Final Thoughts
Use this template to apply for executive-level roles, senior management positions, high-impact IC roles, or even when pitching yourself for freelance expert opportunities.
The difference between a resume that gets filed away and one that gets you an offer often comes down to one thing: **Proof of ownership.** Show them you don't just do the work; you own the outcome.