How to Write a CV for Entry-Level Jobs in South Africa (Free Template)
Your CV is often the only thing standing between you and an interview. For entry-level jobs — general worker, cashier, driver, learnerships — employers spend seconds scanning each one, so a clear, one-page CV beats a long, cluttered one. Here's exactly what to include, plus a free template you can copy.
Keep it to one page
For entry-level roles, one page is ideal. Employers want to see, at a glance, who you are, how to reach you, and why you can do the job. Save the long detail for the interview.
What to include (in order)
- Personal details – full name, phone number, email, city/area, and your ID number. Make sure the phone number works and you answer it.
- A short personal statement – two or three lines on who you are and what you're looking for. Example: *"Reliable, hard-working matriculant seeking a general worker position. Physically fit, punctual, and eager to learn."*
- Skills – list 4–6 relevant ones, e.g. teamwork, time-keeping, basic computer skills, customer service, a valid driver's licence and PrDP, ability to do physical work.
- Work experience (if any) – job title, employer, dates, and one line on what you did. No experience? Include part-time work, piece jobs, internships or volunteering.
- Education – highest qualification (e.g. National Senior Certificate / Matric), school, and year. Add any short courses or certificates.
- References – two people who can vouch for you, with their phone numbers (ask them first).
Free entry-level CV template
[FULL NAME]
Cell: 0XX XXX XXXX | Email: yourname@email.com
Area: [Town, Province] | ID: [ID number]
PERSONAL STATEMENT
Reliable and hard-working [matriculant/driver/etc.] seeking a [role].
[One line on your strengths and what you offer.]
SKILLS
- [Skill 1] - [Skill 2]
- [Skill 3] - [Skill 4]
WORK EXPERIENCE
[Job title] – [Employer], [Town] [Month/Year – Month/Year]
- [One line on what you did.]
EDUCATION
National Senior Certificate (Matric) – [School], [Year]
[Any short courses or certificates]
REFERENCES
[Name], [Relationship], [Phone]
[Name], [Relationship], [Phone]Common CV mistakes to avoid
- Spelling and phone-number errors – double-check; a wrong number means a missed call-back.
- Too long – cut anything not relevant to the job.
- A dead email or full voicemail – use contact details you actually check.
- One generic CV for everything – tweak your statement and skills to match each job.
- Sharing sensitive data – never put banking details or passwords on a CV.
Tailor it to the job
Match the words in your CV to the advert. Applying for a driver role? Put your licence code and PrDP near the top. Applying as a cashier? Lead with customer service and cash-handling. A quick tailor each time noticeably improves your call-back rate.
Put your CV to work
Now that your CV is ready, browse the latest openings on Jobenza and start applying — learnerships, general worker jobs, driver jobs and retail & cashier roles — and apply directly with each employer.
