Design Manager
Written by Mike Potter, CPRW, Author • Last updated on July 1, 2026

Design Manager CV Example

Applying for design manager positions requires a strong CV that showcases your best skills and career achievements. It's the mention of key responsibilities from your career, such as leading UX research and managing stakeholder relationships that will show employers you're a good fit for the role. In this guide, we'll equip you with all the key tips and advice you'll need to craft a design manager CV that sets you up for success in your job applications.

If you write a design manager CV that's more professional and engaging, it will help you progress through the ATS screening stage. Ultimately, it will also give you the best chance to impress the hiring manager, which will boost your prospects of reaching the interview stage. Now let’s explore the main sections of a CV and see how to structure each one for maximum impact.

Standard design manager CV sections

Your design manager CV writing strategy may vary significantly according to numerous factors, such as your previous experience, your seniority and the requirements in the job description.

If you've built up some work experience in relevant roles or industry sectors, you'll want to choose a CV format that showcases your career trajectory. Hiring managers will be keen to see how you've used your skills to create positive results for employers in previous roles. In this case, a reverse-chronological CV format is the most likely to make a positive impact. List the most recent and relevant work experience from your career and provide evidence to support your claims in the form of data, figures or other quantifiable results.

However, regardless of your years of experience, a design manager CV needs to connect the dots of your career into a cohesive story. In the following sections, we’ll dive into the specific chapters of your CV step-by-step, showing you how to refine everything from your initial introduction to your long-term achievements.

CV Header

At the top of your design manager CV, add a header that establishes the design language of the document. Include the necessary contact information: your full name, email address, phone number and location. It's not typically necessary to include your full address. Additionally, listing your LinkedIn profile in your CV header can be valuable. It serves to provide more detailed information about your career journey, your qualifications and your industry standing, in an easily accessible way.

For jobs in the UK, a personal photo is usually not required on your CV. That, along with any other personal details such as age, gender, ethnicity and nationality, are generally discouraged under the terms of the Equality Act 2010, which aims to reduce and eliminate discriminatory practices, such as recruitment bias.

Ella Harris
ella-harris@example.com
(111) 222 33 444 55
Oxford
linkedin․com/in/ella–harris–123

CV Summary

Underneath your contact information, write a brief CV summary or CV objective to introduce yourself and highlight a few key skills and qualities. This can help the employer to quickly form a first impression on your suitability for the design manager role. As an alternative to the CV summary, you might wish to write a CV objective. This serves a similar purpose, but instead of focusing on your experience, it highlights you career ambitions and objectives.

For either a CV summary or an objective, aim for a length of two or three sentences. Showcase a few key skills, personal qualities and career achievements or ambitions, always reviewing the job description as you write, to show how you fulfil the requirements of the role.

The most effective way to approach a CV summary is to focus on one or two key skills that reflect the requirements of the job description and show how you've used them to create positive outcomes for previous employers. You'll also want to showcase your unique personal strengths, and touch on how they've contributed to your career progression up to now. Here's an example of an effective design manager CV summary, with evidence of your impact and neat, well-structured sentences:

Good example:

Accomplished Design Manager with five years’ experience leading teams across product design. Led a rebranding project that increased client engagement by 45%. Holds a Bachelor of Arts in Design Management.

Poor example:

Dynamic design manager with extensive professional experience in various design projects, adept at managing teams and contributing to organisational goals while leveraging creative skills and academic background in design management.

See above for an example of an ineffective summary, with subtle differences leading to a reduction of impact. An ineffective summary might be vague or generic, failing to highlight specific personal qualities that help you stand out and failing to address the requirements specified in the job description. They might also lack firm evidence of your skills, and be structured with long, hard-to-read sentences.

Employment History

Work experience is usually the most important section of any CV. Employers will be looking for evidence of how you've developed relevant skills in your career to date, and how you've used them to positive effect in previous roles. Always take the time to tailor this section, including keywords and phrases that match the job description. This will help employers to judge how strong a fit you are for the role, and how you might apply your skills for the benefit of the organisation.

Create a list of all your most relevant roles, going back up to 10 or 15 years if necessary. Include your job title, the name of the employer, its location and the dates you worked there. Include bullet points that explain how you put your skills to good use in each previous role.

What differentiates one CV work experience section from all the others is the use of action verbs and quantifiable evidence in your bullet points. It should showcase how your actions led to positive outcomes for the employer, and show a progression in your skills throughout your career. See below for an example of how to put the work experience section best practice into action:

Good example:

Design Manager, January 2023 - Present
Brightline Design Ltd, Bristol

  • Managed a cross-functional team of ten to deliver redesign of e-commerce platform, increasing conversion by 25%.
  • Oversaw development of brand identity for five international clients, resulting in 30% growth in brand recognition.
  • Delivered user-centred design system that reduced design time by 40% and improved cross-team collaboration.

Poor example:

Design Manager, January 2023 - Present
Brightline Design Ltd, Bristol

  • Led diverse design initiatives across multiple projects, ensuring collaboration and creative alignment with stakeholder requirements.
  • Managed team performance to deliver high-quality outputs, fostering innovation and maintaining consistent design standards.
  • Oversaw design process development, promoting efficiency and ensuring seamless communication across cross-functional teams.

Above you'll find a less effective example of a design manager CV work experience section. The work experience section could fail to make an impression if it's too generic, focuses on older or irrelevant roles or lacks tailoring to the job description. It's also important to avoid focusing too much on responsibilities that don't tell the reader anything of the value you added to the role.

Education and Qualifications

With your education section, you'll draw attention to your most recent and highest qualifications, particularly emphasising any qualifications listed as a requirement in the job description.

Your career as a design manager typically won't require a specific degree or degree-level equivalent qualification. However, you should still include your highest certifications, training and formal qualifications in your CV's education section, even if not specified in the job description. These might include Agile Project Management Certification, or any other relevant training that demonstrates your skills in project management and planning or vector graphics software mastery.

When listing your qualifications in your education section, select only the most suitable qualifications and list them in reverse-chronological order, starting with the most recent and working backwards. For each qualification, add its name and level, the awarding body or institution, its location (if necessary) and your dates of attendance or graduation. If you want to emphasise your education in your CV, include bullet points showing specialist areas of study, projects, awards, society memberships or anything else that helps show you've got the necessary skills for the job.

You might also wish to add specialist qualifications, certifications or licences that are required for the role. If you add any of these, include the expiry date, if the qualification requires renewal in the future.

Bachelor of Arts in Design Management, 2018 - 2021
University of the Arts London, London

Key Skills

In your CV's skills section, you'll want to draw attention to some of your strongest skills that make you suitable for the role. Review the job description to get an idea of the most essential skills, and create a list of hard and soft skills, including some of your strongest, most unique qualities that set you apart from other candidates. In a design manager CV, only list the most relevant and essential skills you possess, such as leadership and budget allocation and forecasting, to make a positive first impression and show you're qualified for the design manager position.

Hard Skills

Hard and technical skills are the essential skills required for carrying out the everyday duties of the role. They might include specialist operation of certain software or equipment, or knowledge of certain industry standards and regulations. You could gain these skills via training, certifications or industry experience. For design manager roles, key hard skills you've gained, such as UX design and research, and project management and planning, are typically among the most critical for the job. After checking the job description, include a list of four or five key hard skills in your CV to confirm that you have the necessary expertise for the role.

The best hard skills section will contain a mix of your strongest technical skills and those listed in the job description as 'essential' or 'desirable'. The closer your skills list is to matching the essential job description skills, the better your chances of success.

The following section highlights skills that are commonly listed under hard skills in a design manager CV:

  • UX design and research
  • UI prototyping and testing
  • Project management and planning

Soft Skills

Soft skills are the personal strengths and qualities that show employers how well you'll fit into the role and complement other members of the team. Soft skills tend to be more transferable and applicable to different roles than hard and technical skills. Owing to the rapidly evolving nature of the work landscape, soft skills are growing in importance for a number of roles and industry sectors where technology is replacing hard skills. Additionally, soft skills are particularly valuable for junior and entry-level candidates, who might not have much work experience but have the right building blocks for a successful career.

As with hard skills, review the job description to understand the best soft skills to mention in your design manager CV. The best CV soft skills section includes specific skills that you can evidence with examples throughout your CV. Craft a list of up to five key soft and transferable skills that reflect the job description, while also including some of your strongest, most unique skills to stand out from the crowd.

The section below provides an overview of soft skills often highlighted in a design manager CV.

  • Communication
  • Leadership
  • Collaboration

Languages

Including a section on language skills can be beneficial, if you speak at least one language to a reasonable level of competency, in addition to your mother tongue. This is true even if language skills aren't a requirement for the role, as foreign language abilities often correlate to other valuable soft skills. Within this section, list the foreign languages you speak to a reasonable degree of competence, together with an indicator of your skill levels.

There are several methods of confirming your foreign language skills on your CV. The simplest way is by assigning a basic descriptive word, such as:

  • English: Fluent
  • Spanish: Intermediate

Alternatively, use an internationally recognised framework for languages, such as the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR). This gives your language skills a standardised competence indicator, as follows:

  • A1: Beginner
  • A2: Elementary
  • B1: Intermediate
  • B2: Upper intermediate
  • C1: Advanced
  • C2: Proficiency

Certifications and Licences

Depending on the role and your qualifications, it might be necessary to include a certifications section. Having a separate section can draw more attention to your training, and show employers your proactive, motivated mindset towards professional development, which could be a key asset. Furthermore, if there are any necessary certifications or licences for the job, this CV section takes on even more importance. If you're applying for a technical role or a position that involves the use of specialist software or equipment, these might make it more necessary to include a section showcasing your training.

See below for a list of example certifications and licences you might add to your CV for design manager roles:

  • PRINCE2 Foundation Certification, 2023
  • Agile Project Management Certification, 2023
  • Lean Six Sigma Green Belt, 2023

Expert Tip:

With recruiters scanning CVs in less than nine seconds, Barnet Council highlights the importance of a short and compelling personal summary. (1)

Additional Information

Adding optional sections to the end of your design manager CV is a good way of showing you have the necessary skills for the job. Consider optional sections for your CV if you're looking for ways to show you're right for the job, beyond your work experience. Optional sections are particularly valuable if you haven't had the chance to build up relevant work experience, for example, if you're applying for entry-level roles or you're changing careers to a new industry or role.

You can find more detailed advice on tailoring your CV in our career resources, where we cover proven ways to highlight your skills effectively.

Hobbies and Interests

If you have any hobbies and interests that can showcase skills relevant to the job description, it might be worth including them. In addition, this section is the ideal way to show aspects of your personality that might not otherwise shine through in your CV, helping to offer a point of difference compared to other candidates. However, hobbies and interests can only add value to your CV if they provide evidence of skills and experience that you can use in the role you're applying for. As such, only add hobbies as a way of filling gaps in the skills you've developed or used through work experience.

Career Achievements

Creating a list of your key career achievements can be an effective way of drawing attention to the things you're most proud of from your career. In your list, add any awards you've won, industry recognition or key career milestones that tell a story about your suitability for the role and place you ahead of other candidates.

Volunteering

Listing any previous voluntary work is another useful way of showing you have the necessary skills and experience for the job. If you don't have much relevant work experience, either because you're a junior candidate or you're changing jobs from an unrelated field, volunteering can provide valuable examples of your skills in action. For this section, use a similar structure to your work experience section.

List your job title or a description of the role, the organisation name, its location and the dates you occupied the role. Use bullet points to show employers how you put your skills to use, and any positive achievements from your time in the role.

Data Insight:

More than 3 out of every 4 recruiters use ATS software to check basic candidate details, including experience levels, hard skills and previous job titles. (2)

Jobseeker
HR Trends

Best action words for a design manager CV

Using strong action verbs in your work experience bullet points is a great way to focus this section and show the impact you've made in your career to date. Starting each bullet point with an action verb that reflects the skills required for the role will help the reader to easily cross-reference your skills to the job description. Always remember to back up any action verbs you use with evidence that shows the impact it made and the achievements that it led to. Use past tense for action verbs that describe previous roles, and present tense for your current position.

  • Coordinate
  • Oversee
  • Innovate
  • Strategise
  • Collaborate
  • Streamline
  • Mentor
  • Implement
  • Evaluate
  • Facilitate

Full example of design manager CV

Now we've shown you everything that needs to go into your design manager CV, we can take a look at how it comes together in its final form in the following example:

Ella Harris
Innovative Design Manager Driving Results

Oxford

ella-harris@example.com

(111) 222 33 444 55

linkedin․com/in/ella–harris–123

Design manager with 5 years' experience leading teams to deliver award-winning campaigns. Achieved 20% increase in client engagement through innovative brand strategies. Holds a Bachelor of Arts in Design Management.

Employment

Design manager

2023

-

2026

Dyson (Malmesbury)

  • Led cross-functional team to deliver new product design three weeks ahead of schedule, boosting sales by 15%.
  • Managed redesign of flagship mobile app, improving user satisfaction scores by 25% and reducing support tickets by 40%.
  • Implemented design system across five global offices, standardising brand guidelines and cutting project turnaround time by 30%.
Education

Bachelor of Arts in Design Management

2018

-

2021

University of the Arts London (London)

Skills
  • UX design and research

  • UI prototyping and testing

  • Project management and planning

Qualities
  • Communication

  • Leadership

  • Collaboration

Certificates
  • PRINCE2 Foundation Certification

  • Agile Project Management Certification

Languages
  • English - Native

  • French - Advanced

If you're not sure what your one-page, finalised CV design might look like, check out our examples.

Best practice and common mistakes for your design manager CV

Tips to follow

  • Quantify your achievements whenever possible, adding key figures and evidence to support your claims.
  • Use reverse-chronological order to list your work experience, starting with your current or most recent position and working back through relevant roles.
  • Open your CV with a strong CV summary or objective, providing a brief account of your career achievements and skills.
  • List your qualifications in a standalone education section, adding grades and awards where these can help you stand apart from other candidates, such as for junior positions.
  • Keep your CV as concise as possible, aiming for a length of one side of A4 for junior roles, or two for more experienced candidates (longer than two sides is only necessary for senior or academic positions).

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Don't add too much irrelevant or unrelated information to your CV regarding work or other experience – it takes up valuable space and doesn't help your chances of success.
  • Don't overburden the reader with too much information but stick to the most relevant, concise and focused content possible.
  • Don't forget to review your contact information to make sure it's current, and update your LinkedIn profile with your latest career details.
  • Leave out any detailed personal information, such as age, gender or marital status, and avoid adding a personal photo unless it's required for the role.
  • Don't add a hobbies and interests section unless they're directly related to the position or help you show skills that you can't prove through work experience.

A compelling cover letter is an essential part of a successful job application. Ensure your cover letter matches the style and design of your CV with our professional cover letter templates.

Tips for optimising your CV for ATS

Employers and recruiters now routinely use applicant tracking systems (ATS) to ease the burden of the selection process. One of the key functions of these systems is CV screening, which reviews CVs and ranks them based on their likely fit for the role. By taking on this task, the systems can save hiring managers the time and effort of reviewing every CV in detail. With vacancies regularly receiving hundreds of applications, this can increase the efficiency of the recruitment process.

Because ATS software is becoming more common in the recruitment process, it's important to make some concessions in your CV to give yourself the best chance of progressing beyond the initial screening. With that in mind, here are some tips on preparing your CV for ATS screening:

  • Include keywords and phrases that mirror the job description, increasing your chances of ranking highly in the ATS screening stage.
  • Use standard CV headings that make your CV easier to navigate, such as 'work experience', 'education' and 'skills'.
  • Choose a simple, straightforward CV layout with clear, consistent formatting, that avoids text boxes, graphics or other special design elements, as these can make your CV harder to scan.
  • Select a font that enhances the readability of your CV, including recognised serif and sans serif fonts between sizes 10 and 12 for body text, and 14 and 16 for headings.
  • Use bullet points rather than writing long, full sentences, as this will make your CV easier to scan and parse, and help your keywords and phrases to stand out.

You might feel there are a lot of steps to creating an ATS-compatible design manager CV, but with just a few small changes, you can ensure your CV passes this stage. Use one of our ATS-compatible CV templates, which are designed by experts to give you the best chances of success.

If you're looking to make a strong first impression on hiring managers with your CV, use Jobseeker's eye-catching CV templates, which are approved by HR experts.

Design manager CV FAQs

How do I produce an effective design manager cover letter for my application?

A well-written cover letter can be just as important as a CV for your chances of job application success. When writing your cover letter, choose a formal professional letter format and use a cover letter template that matches the design of your CV.

A typical cover letter layout includes three key paragraphs of written content. Firstly, the opening paragraph includes an introduction to yourself and confirms the role you're applying for, as well as outlining your motivation for applying. Secondly, you'll want to detail some of your key skills and achievements, without repeating your CV. Close your cover letter by expressing your gratitude and enthusiasm, and leaving a call to action that encourages the reader to make contact with you.

Alternatively, if you're sending your application via email and prefer a more informal tone, you might wish to include a short cover note. This can adopt more casual email conventions rather than following a professional letter format, and simply needs to introduce you, confirm the role you're applying for and direct the reader to the attached CV or application form. Include your contact details at the end of your CV.

Jobseeker's cover letter examples for design industry job titles can help you gain valuable insights from HR specialists on how to craft the most engaging, professional cover letter.

How do I write a compelling design manager CV without experience?

Even if you're lacking relevant work experience, you can still write a design manager CV that impresses employers.

Choose a CV format that places greater emphasis on your skills over your work experience, such as the functional format. In this CV layout, your skills section and education typically come before your work experience.

For junior positions, it's important to emphasise your soft and transferable skills. Employers will be looking less for design manager candidates with a depth of experience, and more for candidates who can show they have the soft skills, such as ability to adapt and learn, to thrive in a new role and environment.

How do you write an impactful design manager CV headline?

A CV headline can be a way to grab the attention of the reader early in your CV, indicating that you're a good fit for the role and you offer something different to other candidates.

Aim to write a short, engaging sentence that includes the job title and shows you to be a good match for the job description.

To give your CV the best shot at success, write a CV headline that focuses on the most essential keywords and phrases from the job description. This will strike a chord with the hiring manager and help your CV to pass the ATS screening stage.

The examples below show best practice for writing a CV headline at different experience levels:

  • Junior Design Manager Driving Innovation
  • Innovative Design Manager Driving Results
  • Visionary Award-Winning Senior Design Manager

What design manager CV format gives me the best chance of success in 2026?

The best design manager CV format for success in your 2026 job hunt might vary according to your experience levels, the type and level of the role, the company and standard industry practices.

Typically, the most effective CV format for most candidates is a standard reverse-chronological structure that prioritises your work experience section as a showcase of your skills and career achievements.

Conversely, for candidates without relevant work experience (such as recent graduates or career changers), a functional format can be beneficial, as this emphasises skills and qualifications over work experience.

Key takeaways for a successful design manager CV

To stand out from the crowd with your CV, tailor your approach to each individual application, incorporating keywords and phrases that match the job description. Use a CV format that reflects your experience levels, and emphasise your skills and achievements throughout your CV, to show employers you've got the required skills and experience for the job.

Finally, enhancing the look and feel of your CV using one of Jobseeker's HR-approved CV templates can help leave a lasting impression on the reader, and boost your chances of success with your job applications.

Sources:

  1. Barnet Council (UK local government), Recruitment tips: How to write a supporting statement
  2. Jobseeker, HR Trends
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Author
Mike Potter is a Certified Professional Resume Writer (CPRW) and an experienced copywriter specialising in careers and professional development. He uses extensive knowledge of workplace culture to create insightful and actionable articles on CV writing and career pathways.

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