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FIFO resume examples / Dump Truck Operator

FIFO Resume Example – Dump Truck Operator (Mining / FIFO)

Dump truck operator resumes perform best when they are licence/competency-forward and show safe, consistent production habits. This example focuses on clear, scannable evidence without inflating experience.

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Why Dump Truck Operator resumes get ignored

Most people aren’t rejected because they’re unqualified — they’re rejected because the resume isn’t structured for screening. This example shows what “scan-friendly” looks like.

  • Licences/competencies aren’t upfront and scannable.
  • No safety habits shown (pre-starts, comms, fatigue awareness).
  • Overclaims (sites, numbers, equipment) kill trust fast.
  • Paragraphs instead of skimmable bullets.

What recruiters scan first

  • Licences/competencies: HR/HC (if held), VOC/RIIs (only if held), site inductions (only if real).
  • Safety signals: pre-starts, hazard reporting, fatigue management, radios/comms, separation rules.
  • Production mindset: consistent cycles, following dispatch, reporting issues early (no fake numbers).
  • Equipment exposure (only what you’ve operated).

Suggested structure

Headline: Dump Truck Operator | Haulage | Safety & Production (truthful).

Summary: highlight safety, procedural discipline, communications, shift work.

Skills: pre-start inspections, radio comms, following dispatch, situational awareness.

Tickets/Licences: list the facts. If not held, do not imply it.

Employment History: bullets that show safe habits and consistency.

Example skills (pick what’s true)

Pre-start inspections

Two-way radio communications

Procedural compliance (SOPs/JHAs)

Fatigue management awareness

Vehicle checks and basic fault reporting

Bullet examples

Use these as templates. Keep wording factual — don’t invent sites, tickets, hours, rosters, or outcomes.

  • Completed consistent pre-start checks and reported faults early to prevent downtime and keep equipment safe to operate.
  • Maintained safe separation and followed site traffic rules and communications protocols.
  • Worked safely on rotating shifts, following procedures and adapting to changing priorities.
  • Kept accurate run notes / handover details as required and escalated issues promptly.

Common mistakes

  • Claiming specific mine sites or equipment types you haven’t used.
  • Inventing production numbers (tonnes per hour, cycle times).
  • Ignoring licences/competencies in the top third of the resume.
  • Overwriting with long paragraphs instead of skimmable bullets.

FAQs

If I’m new to mining, can I still apply?

Yes — but you must not imply mine-site experience. Focus on transferable safety habits, shift work tolerance, and procedural discipline.

Should I list every machine type?

Only list equipment you’ve actually operated or been trained on. If unsure, leave it out.

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