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Communication

High Demand

Professional communication encompasses written and verbal skills including presentations, technical documentation, email etiquette, stakeholder management, and cross-functional collaboration. Strong communicators translate complex ideas into clear, actionable messages for diverse audiences.

Why Employers Want Communication Skills

Miscommunication is the root cause of most project failures, missed deadlines, and team conflicts. Employers value communicators who can write clearly, present confidently, listen actively, and bridge gaps between technical and non-technical teams. Strong communication multiplies the effectiveness of every other skill on a candidate's resume.

Free Learning Resources

Build your Communication skills with these curated free courses and guides.

How Retold Helps You Showcase Communication

Having Communication skills is only half the battle — your resume needs to clearly communicate them to hiring managers and applicant tracking systems. Retold analyzes your resume against specific job descriptions to identify whether your Communication experience is properly highlighted, suggests missing keywords, and rewrites your bullet points to better match what employers are looking for.

Retold's gap analysis shows you exactly which skills from the job description are missing from your resume, and the AI-powered tailoring engine adds them naturally — so your application passes ATS screening and resonates with human reviewers.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I demonstrate communication skills on my resume?

Show communication through outcomes: 'Presented quarterly analytics reports to C-suite, influencing $2M budget reallocation' or 'Wrote technical documentation that reduced onboarding time from 3 weeks to 1 week.' Specific examples of cross-functional collaboration, client presentations, and written deliverables are stronger than listing 'communication skills' generically.

Why do technical roles require communication skills?

Engineers explain architecture decisions to stakeholders. Data analysts present findings to executives. Product managers align cross-functional teams. Designers defend design choices with research. Every technical role requires translating complex ideas into language that different audiences can understand and act on.

How can I improve my professional communication?

Write regularly (technical blog, internal documentation), present at team meetings or meetups, practice active listening in conversations, and ask for feedback on your writing and presentations. Communication improves through repetition and feedback, not through reading about it.

Related Skill Guides

Make sure Communication shows up where it matters

Retold tailors your resume to match job descriptions in 30 seconds — with keyword matching, ATS analysis, and skill gap identification built in.

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