13+ Best Skills for a Instructional Designer Resume
Instructional designer resumes should showcase your ability to create effective learning experiences using established design frameworks. Employers want to see specific authoring tools you have mastered and measurable improvements in learner outcomes.
Design & Development
“Developed 40+ eLearning modules in Articulate Storyline that trained 5,000 employees with a 94% completion rate”
Technology & Platforms
“Administered an LMS serving 10,000+ learners, improving course enrollment efficiency by 30%”
Assessment & Strategy
Skill Priority Guide
Not all skills carry equal weight. Prioritize the ones most commonly requested in instructional designer job descriptions.
| Skill | Priority |
|---|---|
| Articulate Storyline | Must Have |
| ADDIE Model | Must Have |
| Curriculum Design | Must Have |
| Learning Management Systems | Must Have |
| SCORM/xAPI | Must Have |
| Learning Needs Analysis | Must Have |
| Assessment Design | Must Have |
| Stakeholder Collaboration | Must Have |
| Adobe Captivate | Nice to Have |
| Video Production | Nice to Have |
| Camtasia | Nice to Have |
| Accessibility (WCAG) | Nice to Have |
| HTML/CSS | Bonus |
Name your authoring tools explicitly (Storyline, Captivate, Rise) rather than saying 'eLearning tools.' ATS filters match specific names.
Include learner outcome metrics like completion rates, assessment scores, or time-to-competency improvements.