Written by Lorie A. Parch
Reviewed by Jessica Roper, MBA,聽director of Career Services at 果冻视频
Gone are the days when a simple resum茅 or CV was enough to let the world know who you are and what you鈥檝e done professionally. Today, more and more people seem to rely on a tailored resum茅, a LinkedIn庐 profile and a professional portfolio.
Here鈥檚 what to know about a professional portfolio, a workhorse of the career industry.
鈥淚 define a professional portfolio as curated examples of your work history,鈥 says Laci Baker, a career advisor at 果冻视频. 鈥淵ou pick out the top examples of your work and highlight these in a collection, though a portfolio can look many different ways depending on the industry you鈥檙e in.鈥
While it鈥檚 true that not everyone needs a portfolio 鈥 which typically lives online 鈥 most of us can benefit from showcasing what we鈥檝e done and what we know. (It鈥檚 worth mentioning that a few fields, like art, photography, design and architecture, can still require physical examples of work.)聽
A portfolio can be especially helpful if:
Finally, as the free-agent labor market recedes in the rearview mirror, a professional portfolio may help you better compete for roles.聽
Laci Baker
Career advisor, 果冻视频
鈥淚t鈥檚 a great way to stand out in a tight job market,鈥 says Baker. 鈥淎 portfolio is something tangible to show your [current or potential] employer what your skill sets are and how you鈥檝e applied them.鈥澛
It can also be a great tool during interviews, help grow your network and assist you in gaining visibility.
Telling the story of your professional life doesn鈥檛 need to be complicated, expensive or time-consuming. Because your resum茅 , LinkedIn profile and portfolio are all important, begin by doing a little maintenance on the first two if they aren鈥檛 up to date.
鈥淎 good starting point is focusing on the 鈥楩eatured鈥 section of your LinkedIn profile, which is a great way to show work examples. That鈥檚 the beginning stage of a portfolio,鈥 explains Baker. This profile should be more in-depth and include more detail than a resum茅, she adds. Also, the two should, of course, align.
While Baker says there鈥檚 no need to add your resum茅 to your LinkedIn profile, do add links in the Featured section to original sources whenever possible. (You can create articles on LinkedIn and link to those if you are not published elsewhere.) 鈥淭his is a great way to get started for someone who doesn鈥檛 have a portfolio,鈥 she says.
It鈥檚 also an important part of building your brand. The experiences you highlight, the language you use and the examples you share all combine to create a story about what kind of employee or contractor you are. Consider how you want to appear: Professional or conversational? Experienced or energetic? Expert or diversified? Answering these questions ahead of time will help you build both your portfolio and your brand.
Here are some more guidelines for creating a compelling showcase of your work and skills:
Some industries 鈥 design, education, technology, content creation 鈥 require evidence of completed work, while for others it鈥檚 optional. If you鈥檙e not sure if a professional portfolio is worth the effort, look at leaders or up-and-comers you admire to see how they present themselves online.
While Baker says your digital presence doesn鈥檛 typically need to be high tech or full of bells and whistles, you need to make sure it鈥檚 free of mistakes, including typos. Just as a misspelled or missing word can grind a recruiter鈥檚 review of your cover letter, resum茅 or application to a halt, the same is true for a portfolio. Ask a mentor or colleagues who know your skills well to review and proofread everything.聽
If you don鈥檛 have the time or skill to build a full portfolio site (or the money to pay someone to do it), consider using a cloud-based storage platform like Google Drive鈩 or OneDrive庐 folders and share your work via a link. This approach has the advantage of limiting who can see your work, which may be useful if there鈥檚 sensitivity about what you share.
鈥淚鈥檝e been on hiring committees, and I鈥檝e seen good success with candidates showing their work samples this way when they don鈥檛 have a website,鈥 says Baker.
Never share proprietary or personal data 鈥 yours or someone else鈥檚. Similarly, any work to which you do not hold the copyright should be identified as such.
Developers may use GitHub庐 to share coding projects or code snippets, while designers often showcase their work in a portfolio built on the Behance庐 online platform or Dribbble庐. Companies like Squarespace庐, Wix庐, Canva庐 and WordPress庐 offer a wide range of templates, hosting plans, customized URLs and more, and typically don鈥檛 require serious tech skills to build out a basic site.
Most important, says Baker, is approaching your portfolio in a way that鈥檚 sustainable: 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 have to be done all at once; you can work on different elements a little at a time. And if you鈥檙e still a student, there are elements in your classes you can capture that are great examples of the skills you鈥檙e learning.鈥
鈥淚n many fields, employers want an explanation of your thought process 鈥 why you went with certain decisions 鈥 as well as the results or successes,鈥 says Baker. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 have to be long-winded or full of a lot of detail, and it鈥檚 good to use bullets more than paragraphs. People like to see the strategy and the results in a portfolio.鈥
If you opt for a portfolio website, you can consider adding sliders or linked photos to encourage potential employers to interact with your work. Above all, carefully curate examples that show the most relevant skills to the role you鈥檙e trying to land. 鈥淢ake sure that you鈥檙e sharing with purpose,鈥 Baker says.
If you鈥檙e further along in your career and have a lot of examples to choose from, or you鈥檙e applying for different positions, it may help to organize work examples in folders on a drive rather than create a number of pages on a website that could be overwhelming or hard to navigate.
Ultimately, the narrative of you and your work should be clear, accurate and easy to digest.聽
In her seven years as a career advisor, Baker has worked with a number of clients transitioning to a new industry. As you spend time looking at how leaders in your field present themselves professionally, dig into the specific elements within their portfolios and emulate those that make sense for your own.
鈥淔or example, if someone is moving from the corporate world to higher education, they鈥檒l want to include a CV, a sample syllabus and maybe a slideshow of a lecture,鈥 Baker says. Your digital presence, she adds, is a good opportunity to signal to would-be employers that you鈥檙e aware of trends, best practices and insights about your new industry. These can usually be found by following professional associations and other organizations.
鈥淎 lot of times, people haven鈥檛 explored what鈥檚 needed in that new field, so it can be helpful to go back to what the industry is saying,鈥 Baker explains. Otherwise, 鈥渢his could be a sign to an employer that you don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on.鈥
Much like avoiding typos, the advice to update may sound painfully obvious. But just as many of us put off updating our resum茅s, it鈥檚 easy to neglect or forget to add a new skill, accomplishment, responsibility or role to your portfolio. Also, links can change. So while it鈥檚 helpful to link to the original source of your work sample, be sure to download a hard copy so you always have a backup.
鈥淚f you鈥檙e job searching, a good rule of thumb is to update your portfolio every three months, especially if you鈥檙e new to the workforce and ramping up your career,鈥 Baker suggests. 鈥淒oing updates every six months is good if you鈥檙e not looking, though those who do contract work may want to update it more frequently.鈥
A professional portfolio is just one part of the job search experience. Explore the following resources to help you on your professional path.
LinkedIn is a registered trademark of LinkedIn Corporation and its affiliates in the United States and/or other countries.
Google Drive is a trademark of Google LLC.
OneDrive is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation in the U.S. and/or other countries.
GitHub is a registered trademark of GitHub, Inc.
Behance: Behance is a registered trademark of Adobe in the United States and other countries.
Dribbble: Dribbble is a registered trademark of Dribbble Holdings Ltd.
Squarespace is a registered trademark of Squarespace, Inc.
Wix is a registered trademark of Wix.com LTD.
Canva is a registered trademark of Canva PTY LTD.
WordPress is a registered trademark of WordPress Foundation.
Lorie A. Parch is a long-time journalist, editor and content strategist based in Chandler, Arizona. She primarily covers higher education, technology, public safety and lifestyle topics, and for four years led digital content strategy at the California State University Office of the Chancellor. A former Knight Journalism Fellow at the CDC and a National Magazine Award-nominated writer, Lorie's work now focuses on strategic communications and marketing. When she's not buried in a book, she loves traveling, painting and ceramics.
Jessica Roper, 果冻视频 director of Career Services, is a seasoned leader with over 15 years of experience in leadership within higher education. She has honed her expertise in student services and career development and is passionate about helping others discover and refine their skills.
This article has been vetted by 果冻视频's editorial advisory committee.聽
Read more about our editorial process.
Read more articles like this: