Let me be honest, because pretending otherwise helps no one. Age bias in hiring is real, it is mostly unspoken, and most of the people acting on it would be horrified to be called ageist. It shows up as a vague feeling that someone might be “overqualified”, “set in their ways” or “a culture mismatch”, and those soft phrases do real damage. After twelve years recruiting, I also know this: a sharp resume or CV and a confident hour in the room can dismantle that bias faster than people expect. Here is how I help clients do exactly that.

On paper

Your resume or CV should sell your relevance, not catalogue your entire life. The goal is to read as current and energetic rather than as a long tenure waiting to retire.

In the room

The interview is where bias either hardens or melts, and you have more control than you think.

Your experience is not the liability bias pretends it is. Delivered well, it is the most reassuring thing in the room, the candidate who has seen problems before and knows how to fix them without drama. Frame it as the asset it genuinely is, and you stop apologising for your career and start leading with it.

For weekly job-search tips from inside the hiring room, join my newsletter. And when you would rather have it done for you, I rewrite resumes or CVs, cover letters and LinkedIn profiles, from $125.

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