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Latest revision as of 10:05, 23 August 2025
Effectively highlighting your academic achievements and research is key to standing out in faculty applications and grant proposals. This guide explains how to showcase your scholarly contributions in a structured and compelling way:
1. Select Your Key Achievements
- Identify 3â5 major accomplishments: publications, awards, grants, or significant projects
- Focus on achievements with measurable impact or recognition
2. Publications
- List peer-reviewed articles, books, book chapters, and conference proceedings
- Highlight publications in top-tier journals
- Include citation counts, impact factors, or awards if relevant
- Example
- Published 4 articles in *Journal of Strategy* with an average citation rate of 25 per article.
3. Grants & Funded Projects
- Detail research grants, fellowships, and funded collaborations
- Include project title, funding amount, dates, and your role
- Example
- PI on $150k grant studying digital transformation in higher education, supporting 2 PhD students.
4. Awards & Recognitions
- Include teaching awards, research honors, and professional society recognitions
- Mention competitive selection processes or national/international scope
- Example
- Recipient of the Early Career Research Award, granted to 5 researchers globally in 2024.
5. Research Presentations
- List invited talks, keynote speeches, and conference presentations
- Include event name, location, and date
- Optionally, mention audience size or conference prestige
- Example
- Presented research on digital strategy at the 2024 Academy of Management Annual Meeting (audience: 300+ scholars).
6. Integrating Research with Teaching
- Highlight how your research informs your teaching
- Include examples of courses, seminars, or student projects influenced by your research
Extra Tips
- Prioritize achievements that align with the position or funding opportunity
- Use concise, active language
- Quantify outcomes whenever possible
- Organize in reverse chronological order
- Avoid listing every minor projectâfocus on impactful contributions
Common mistakes to avoid
- Overloading CV with irrelevant achievements
- Failing to contextualize accomplishments (why they matter)
- Neglecting to show research impact or outcomes
- Using vague language like âcontributed to researchâ without specifics
Example Swaps
- âImpact-focusedâ: âLed a research project that resulted in 3 publications and a $120k grant, enhancing department visibility in digital innovation.â
- âTeaching integrationâ: âIntegrated findings from my recent research on strategy execution into MBA course projects, improving student performance by 15%.â
- âRecognitionâ: âAwarded the International Early Career Research Fellowship for outstanding contributions to strategy research.â
Related
Last updated: 13/06/2026 18:02 (UTC)
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