Marketplace scale, operator culture. Built around the build with heart + see the forest and the trees signals Uber actually screens for in Engineering Managers.
Uber is one of the harder leadership bars to clear. Uber hires for operator-style intensity and marketplace-thinking. Bullets that quantify driver/rider/eater impact at city scale outperform generic shipping bullets. The bar is high on quantitative reasoning across all roles. For a Engineering Manager candidate, that translates into a very specific resume shape: the summary has to land in two lines, the bullets have to map to build with heart + see the forest and the trees, and the Skills band has to surface 1:1 coaching, Technical strategy, Hiring, Performance management without burying them in paragraph text.
Recruiters at Uber typically use Greenhouse as the ATS, which weights structured headers and exact-match keyword density over creative formatting. This template is built single-column, parser-clean, and pre-tuned for the keywords Uber screens for: marketplace, shipped, driver, rider, eater. You'll see them woven naturally into the bullets — not stuffed.
The hard part of a Engineering Manager resume tailored to Uber isn't listing skills. It's proving you've operated at Uber-class scale. A bullet like "Hired and grew a 14-person platform team that shipped a 0→1 multi-tenant infrastructure underpinning $48M ARR within 18 months." reads as Uber-grade because it has scope, action, and result. A bullet like "Responsible for 1:1 coaching stack" does not — it tells the reader nothing they couldn't have inferred from the title. The template enforces the first pattern in every section.
Realistic expectation: a well-tuned Engineering Manager resume sees roughly a 5% callback rate at Uber. That's lower than the average company because Uber's top-of-funnel volume is high and the bar is high. The template won't change Uber's acceptance rate — but it will get you out of the auto-reject pile and onto a recruiter's desk, which is where the rest of your candidacy gets to do its work.
Recruiter notes — Uber
Uber recruiters consistently flag the same patterns as filter-grade dealbreakers for Engineering Manager candidates: a summary that reads like a brand statement, bullets without numbers, and missing language around build with heart or see the forest and the trees. The template below removes all three landmines and uses Uber's public 4-value framework as the implicit grading rubric for every bullet.
ATS
Greenhouse
Avg callback
~5%
Sector
consumer
These are the keyword variants Greenhouse weights highest on a Engineering Manager application at Uber. The template surfaces all of them naturally across the summary, experience, and skills sections.
Uber's peers in consumer have similar (but not identical) hiring bars. Compare the role-specific tweaks across companies.
Different role at Uber? The values + ATS notes carry over — here are the role-specific variants:
What does Uber actually look for in a Engineering Manager resume?
Three things, in order: scope (have you operated at Uber-class size), craft (does the resume itself read clean), and culture-match (do the bullets sound like someone who'd thrive on build with heart + see the forest and the trees). The template enforces all three.
What ATS does Uber use, and does it affect formatting?
Uber uses Greenhouse. It parses single-column structured layouts cleanly and chokes on two-column templates and dense graphical sidebars. The template here is single-column, parser-tested, and ATS-clean.
What's a realistic callback rate for Engineering Manager applications at Uber?
Roughly 5% on a tuned resume, which is below the cross-industry average of ~7%. Uber's top-of-funnel volume is high. A great resume gets you onto the recruiter's desk; the rest is your candidacy.
Should I mention Uber's values in my resume?
Don't quote them verbatim — that reads as performative. Do show them through your bullets. If Uber screens for "build with heart", a bullet that demonstrates build with heart reads stronger than one that uses the phrase "build with heart" without proof.
How long should the Engineering Manager resume be for Uber?
One page is the sweet spot for most ranges. Two pages only if the second page earns its space with executive-scope work. Uber recruiters do not spend more time on longer resumes — they spend less.
Customize this Engineering Manager template free — Resume Annex tailors it to the exact Uber posting in 30 seconds, with ATS keywords and value-language baked in.