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Resume to Website

How to Turn Your Resume Into a Professional Website

Your resume already has the raw material. The website version needs to reorganize it around trust, fit, and the next step.

Do not paste the resume onto a page.

A resume is built around work history. A website should be built around how a family or agency decides whether to contact you. That means your strongest credibility signals need to appear before the long timeline.

Start with a clear headline, your role, your location or service area, the type of care you provide, and one obvious contact path.

Pull the strongest pieces forward.

Most care professional resumes bury the information families care about most. Your site should make the useful parts easier to scan.

  • Years of experience and relevant roles
  • Specialties such as newborns, twins, overnights, travel, postpartum recovery, or lactation support
  • Certifications, training, and memberships
  • Care philosophy and communication style
  • Testimonials or references-available language
  • Booking, consult, or inquiry instructions

Simple rule

If a family would have to open a PDF, zoom in, and hunt for the answer, that answer probably belongs on the page.

Rewrite the summary for humans.

The professional summary on a website can be warmer and clearer than resume language. You are not only proving employment history. You are helping someone understand what it feels like to work with you.

Instead of listing every responsibility, explain the pattern: calm overnight support, structured newborn routines, respectful household communication, parent education, or discreet private-family experience.

Keep the work history, but make it scannable.

Use recent roles as proof, not as the entire page. Group placements by relevance, protect private-family details, and highlight outcomes or responsibilities families understand.

You can still link or attach the full resume for agencies that need it. The website should make them want to open it.

End with a clear next step.

A professional website should not end with vague contact information. Tell people what to do next: request availability, book a consult, email for your resume, or ask about a placement window.