A strong CV is the first and most important step toward getting a job interview in Ethiopia. Whether you are applying to government offices, NGOs, private companies, embassies, or international organizations, your CV determines how employers see you before they ever meet you. Unfortunately, thousands of qualified Ethiopian job-seekers are rejected every day — not because they lack skills, but because their CV has mistakes that weaken their professional image.
If you need a step-by-step guide to writing a CV from scratch, start here:
👉 How to Write a Professional CV That Gets You Hired in Ethiopia — 2026 Guide
The good news? Most CV mistakes are easy to avoid. In this guide, you will learn the most common CV errors employers repeatedly mention in Ethiopia and how to fix them immediately to increase your chances of getting hired.
1. Listing Job Duties Instead of Achievements
Many CVs simply list responsibilities like:
- “Handled incoming calls”
- “Prepared reports”
- “Managed store inventory”
Recruiters already know what a receptionist, sales agent, accountant, or storekeeper does. What they want to see is impact.
What to do instead
Focus on results and accomplishments, using numbers when possible:
- “Handled 50+ customer calls daily with a 95% satisfaction score”
- “Prepared weekly financial reports and reduced errors by 20%”
- “Managed inventory for 3 stores and minimized stock shortages by 35%”
Achievements show value — and value gets interviews.
2. Using One CV for Every Job Application
A common mistake in Ethiopia is sending the same CV to dozens of jobs, regardless of sector or role. Employers can immediately tell when a CV is not customized.
What to do instead
Tailor your CV to match each job posting:
- Use keywords from the vacancy notice
- Highlight experience and skills related to that job
- Reorder bullet points so the most relevant achievements appear first
You do not need to rewrite your CV every time — just adapt it for relevance.
3. Including Irrelevant Personal Information
Many CVs still contain unnecessary information such as:
- Father’s name
- Religion
- Marital status
- Number of children
- Kebele ID
- Physical details (height, weight, hair color)
- Salary expectations
Modern recruiters do not evaluate candidates based on personal life information.
What to include instead
Only include professional details:
- Full name
- Phone number
- Email address
- General location (e.g., Addis Ababa)
- LinkedIn profile (optional but recommended)
Anything not related to your professional ability should be removed.
4. Poor Formatting and Long Paragraphs
A CV should be easy to read. Many Ethiopian CVs use long paragraphs, no bullet points, tiny fonts, or inconsistent layout.
What to do instead
Use clean, modern formatting:
- 1–2 pages maximum
- Bullet points rather than paragraphs
- Consistent font size (10–12)
- Headings for sections (Professional Summary, Work Experience, Education, Skills)
Recruiters typically scan a CV for 6–10 seconds. A clean layout wins attention.
5. No Professional Summary at the Top
A CV that begins with education or work history forces the employer to search for key information.
What to do instead
Always include a 3–5 sentence professional summary at the top, highlighting:
- Years of experience
- Industry or specialization
- Strongest skills
- Career goals
Example:
Customer service professional with 4+ years of experience in telecom and banking. Skilled in client communication, problem-solving, and call-center operations. Proven ability to meet performance targets and boost customer satisfaction. Seeking a role in a fast-paced service-oriented organization.
This instantly introduces you as a strong candidate.
6. Missing Skills Section
Many job-seekers assume skills are obvious from experience, so they skip this section. But recruiters often search CVs for keywords using software (ATS systems).
What to do instead
Add a dedicated Skills section including:
Hard Skills (Technical)
- Accounting software (e.g., Peachtree, ERP)
- Data analysis
- Project management
- Driving
- ICT troubleshooting
- Graphic design
- Procurement systems
Soft Skills (People & work behavior)
- Teamwork
- Leadership
- Time management
- Customer handling
- Problem-solving
- Adaptability
Use bullet points — not sentences.
7. Incomplete or Weak Job Dates
Examples of wrong formats:
- “2022–2024”
- “January – December”
- “Still working”
These confuse employers.
Correct format
Use Month + Year for start and end dates:
- Jan 2022 – Aug 2024
- Mar 2021 – Present
If you are still working, add (Present).
8. Typos and Poor English
Even one spelling or grammar mistake can make a recruiter assume the candidate is careless — especially in administrative, banking, customer service, and NGO jobs.
How to fix it
- Read your CV out loud to catch mistakes
- Ask a trusted friend to review it
- Use Grammarly or Microsoft Editor if possible
Professionalism begins with accuracy.
9. No PDF Version When Submitting Online
Many applicants send CVs in Word (.docx) format. This causes layout changes when opened on another computer.
Best practice
- Always save the final version as a PDF
- Use the file name format:
FullName_CV_2026.pdf
Example: Helen Mengistu_CV_2026.pdf
It looks polished and professional.
Final Takeaway
You may have the right skills, the right experience, and the right attitude — but if your CV does not communicate your value clearly, employers will overlook you. By avoiding the mistakes above and strengthening the structure and achievements on your CV, you significantly increase your chances of getting called for interviews.
Next Step — Improve Your CV Today
If you’re ready to take your job search seriously, here’s what you should do right now:
- Open your CV
- Remove unnecessary information
- Add achievements, skills, and a professional summary
- Save it as a clean PDF
- Apply with confidence
Your dream job may only be one well-written CV away.

