Sharper Resume Bullet For IR Roles
This conversation was generated using Cook'd AI's career assistant and reviewed by Fallon Han from our editorial team for accuracy.
I am a fresh history graduate at an Australian university with a work visa, and I am trying to move into investor relations. I keep up with earnings, guidance updates, and sector commentary, but my resume bullet just says I read financial news. Can you help me rewrite it so it sounds more commercial and interview-ready?

Absolutely. For investor relations, the goal is to show that you do not just consume headlines, but that you can turn them into business judgment.
A weak bullet would be:
- Monitored financial news and market updates.
A stronger version would be:
- Tracked company earnings, guidance revisions, and sector commentary to identify how macro and industry trends could affect revenue, margins, and investor sentiment.
That version works better because it shows three things:
1. You follow material information, not just general news.
2. You understand why it matters commercially.
3. You can connect headlines to stakeholder impact.
If you want, I can help you tailor it even more toward investor relations language.
Yes, please. I want it to sound like I can think like an investor relations assistant, not like a student who reads the business section. I have not worked in finance before, so I need wording that stays credible.

That makes sense. The key is to keep it realistic and specific without claiming direct finance experience.
Try this resume bullet:
- Monitored earnings results, management guidance, and industry updates to summarise key business drivers and anticipate how market sentiment could shift.
If you want it a bit stronger for IR, you could use:
- Reviewed earnings releases, guidance changes, and sector commentary to extract commercial implications for growth, profitability, and investor messaging.
Why this works:
- earnings releases shows you are following company-specific information
- guidance changes signals you understand what matters most to investors
- commercial implications makes the business angle explicit
- investor messaging links naturally to IR
If needed, I can also make it sound more Australian market focused.
Yes, could you make it sound relevant to the ASX or Australian market? I want recruiters to see that I understand local companies, policy settings, and how they affect sentiment.

Definitely. For an Australian investor relations role, you want to show awareness of local listed companies and broader policy or sector drivers.
Here are two ASX-oriented options:
- Followed ASX earnings announcements, guidance updates, and sector commentary to assess how local macro conditions and policy settings affected investor sentiment.
- Monitored Australian listed company results, management outlook statements, and industry news to identify commercial implications for revenue, margins, and market perception.
If you want to sound even sharper in an interview, you can say you focused on:
- interest rates and inflation
- consumer demand
- resource prices
- banking or property sector commentary
- regulatory or fiscal policy changes
That shows you are not just reading headlines, but filtering them for relevance to listed businesses.
This is helpful. Could you also give me a version that sounds like a bullet from a university society or casual research role, because that is what I am actually using on my CV?

Of course. For a university society or casual research role, the bullet should still sound analytical and commercially aware, but without pretending it was a formal finance job.
Here is a credible version:
- Researched earnings updates, guidance revisions, and sector news to summarise key trends and link financial developments to business and investor implications.
If you want it a little more polished:
- Analysed company announcements and sector commentary to distil commercial insights on growth, profitability, and market sentiment for internal discussion.
When you speak about it in interviews, keep the emphasis on your process:
- what you tracked
- how you separated signal from noise
- what business implications you drew
That will help you come across as commercially aware, even with a non-finance background.
