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How to Add AI Skills to Your Resume and LinkedIn Profile in 2026

By AIKit Editorial Team 7 min read

Quick answer: Add the specific AI tools you use (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity AI, Notion AI) to your Skills section, then add one results-focused bullet under each relevant role. Pair tool names with specific outcomes — "reduced X from Y hours to Z minutes using ChatGPT" — rather than vague claims like "familiar with AI tools."

Written by the AIKit Editorial Team — practitioners who have tested ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity AI in real professional roles and verified which AI skills employers value most in 2026.

56%salary premium for AI-skilled professionals (PwC, 2025)
71%of marketing roles now require AI proficiency (LinkedIn, 2026)
51%of professionals fear AI job displacement (ResumeNow, 2026)

AI proficiency is the fastest-growing workplace requirement in 2026 — appearing in 71% of marketing job listings and commanding a 56% salary premium for practitioners who demonstrate it (LinkedIn, 2026; PwC, 2025).

The mistake most professionals make is adding a vague "AI tools" line to their Skills section and leaving it there. Recruiters and managers want to see which tools, for which tasks, with what outcomes. This guide gives you the exact language to do that.

Step 1 — Which AI tools to list

List only tools you use at least monthly and can discuss confidently in an interview. The most credible AI skills for non-technical professionals in 2026 are:

  • ChatGPT (OpenAI) — writing, drafting, content creation, summarisation
  • Claude (Anthropic) — document analysis, long-form writing, sensitive communications
  • Perplexity AI — research, fact-checking, market intelligence
  • Notion AI — workflow organisation, meeting notes, project management
  • Prompt Engineering — structuring AI instructions to produce consistent, professional outputs
  • AI Workflow Automation — using AI tools to handle repetitive professional tasks systematically

What not to list: Do not list "AI" or "Artificial Intelligence" as standalone skills — they are too vague to be meaningful. List the specific tools, paired with the tasks you use them for.

Resume bullet points — word-for-word templates

Add one AI-focused bullet point to each relevant role in your experience section. Use this structure: [action] + [AI tool] + [specific task] + [result or outcome].

For marketing managers

Copy-paste resume bullet templates

• Integrated ChatGPT and Claude into the marketing workflow, reducing campaign brief production time by 60% and enabling the team to double output without additional headcount.

• Used Perplexity AI for real-time competitive intelligence and market research, replacing 4–6 hours of manual research per week with verified, cited AI-generated summaries.

• Developed a library of 30+ reusable ChatGPT prompt templates for campaign briefs, ad copy, and client communications — adopted by the full marketing team.

• Deployed AI workflow automation (ChatGPT + Claude) to handle weekly performance report drafting, freeing 3 hours per week for strategic campaign analysis.

For HR and recruiting professionals

Copy-paste resume bullet templates

• Implemented ChatGPT into the job description drafting process, reducing average production time from 90 minutes to 20 minutes while improving language inclusivity across all postings.

• Used Claude to analyse batches of 20+ CVs simultaneously, cutting initial screening time by 65% and enabling faster response times to candidates.

• Introduced Perplexity AI for salary benchmarking, replacing manual market research with real-time, source-cited compensation data for [number] roles per quarter.

• Trained the HR team on AI tool fundamentals (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity AI), increasing AI adoption across the department from 0 to [X] active users.

LinkedIn profile — where and how to update

Skills section

Add these as individual skills (LinkedIn allows you to add each one separately, which improves search visibility):

  • ChatGPT
  • Claude AI
  • Perplexity AI
  • Notion AI
  • Prompt Engineering
  • AI Workflow Automation
  • Generative AI

About section — add one sentence

At the end of your About/Summary section, add a sentence that anchors your AI skills explicitly:

For marketing managers

In 2026, I've integrated AI tools — ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity AI — into my daily workflow, cutting campaign production time significantly and positioning my team to work at a scale that wasn't possible two years ago.

For HR professionals

I use ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity AI daily — for job description drafting, CV analysis, and salary benchmarking — and have trained my team to use these tools across our full recruitment pipeline.

Experience section bullets

Use the same bullet templates from the resume section above. LinkedIn experience bullets and resume bullets can be identical — there is no penalty for consistency.

Performance review language

When writing self-reviews or preparing for performance conversations, frame AI adoption as a contribution to team efficiency and business outcomes — not just personal productivity.

Performance review language templates

"This year I integrated AI tools (ChatGPT, Claude) into our [team/department] workflow, reducing [specific task] from [X hours] to [Y minutes] and enabling [specific outcome, e.g. higher campaign volume / faster candidate response times]."

"I have developed reusable AI prompt frameworks for [specific tasks] that have been adopted by [X] team members, multiplying the impact of my individual AI work across the team."

"I proactively upskilled in AI tools relevant to our function — completing the AI Survival Kit and implementing its frameworks into our existing workflows — contributing to a measurable reduction in [metric]."

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Listing "AI" as a skill without specifics. "Familiar with AI tools" signals nothing. Name the tools: ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity AI.
  • Claiming skills you can't back up. Only list tools you can confidently discuss in an interview. If you've only used a tool once, say you're "actively developing proficiency" rather than claiming expertise.
  • Missing the outcome. "Used ChatGPT for reports" is weak. "Used ChatGPT to reduce report drafting from 4 hours to 45 minutes" is strong.
  • Ignoring prompt engineering. The ability to write effective AI prompts is a distinct, valued skill. List it explicitly — most of your peers haven't.

The AI Survival Kit includes a Resume Language Pack

Word-for-word AI competency phrases adapted for marketing managers and HR professionals — ready to paste into your resume, LinkedIn, and performance review. Included in both kit editions.

Marketing Managers Kit → HR Professionals Kit →

Frequently asked questions

How do I list AI skills on my resume in 2026? +

List specific tools (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity AI) in your Skills section, then add one results-focused bullet under each relevant role. Specific tools and outcomes ('reduced report drafting by 60% using ChatGPT') are more persuasive than generic claims ('familiar with AI tools').

What AI skills are most valued by employers in 2026? +

LinkedIn (2026) identifies prompt engineering, AI workflow automation, and proficiency with specific tools (ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity) as the most valued AI skills for non-technical roles. Employers value demonstrated proficiency — specific tools and results — over theoretical knowledge.

Should I list ChatGPT on my resume? +

Yes, if you use it regularly. List it alongside Claude and Perplexity AI in a Skills or Tools section. Pair the tool name with a specific use case — 'ChatGPT (campaign briefs, ad copy, performance reports)' — for maximum credibility.

How do I talk about AI skills in a performance review? +

Frame AI adoption as a contribution to team efficiency and outcomes. Example: 'Integrated ChatGPT and Claude into the team workflow this year, reducing campaign brief production time by approximately 60% and enabling higher campaign volume without additional headcount.'

What if I only use AI tools occasionally? +

List only tools you use at least monthly and can discuss confidently. Occasional use is still valid — frame it as a skill you are actively developing: 'Currently integrating ChatGPT and Perplexity AI into [specific workflow]' is honest and forward-looking.