You shouldn't go crazy with bold lettering, underlining words, or using italicized fonts but you can use more sharp looking fonts such as Bookman, Helvetica, or even
Arial typefaces.
Instead, be conservatively distinctive.Choose a sharp - looking typeface such as Bookman, Soutane, Krone, or Fritz, or if your font selection is limited, the more prevalent Times Roman, Helvetica or
Arial typefaces.
Not exact matches
It's best to stick with standard Web
typefaces, such as
Arial, Times, Helvetica, Georgia or Verdana.
The
typeface used is Union, a hybrid of Helvetica and
Arial, created by Czech typographer Radim Peško in 2009.
It should be clean and uncluttered with a legible standard
typeface with
Arial or Times New Roman.
This is typically using a serif font
typeface for your headers (like Times New Roman or Garamond) and a cleaner, simpler sans serif font for the body text (like
Arial, Calibri, Tahoma, or Verdana).
Stick to a professional
typeface (such as Calibri, or
Arial in 11 point font) and keep this consistent on both documents.
Whether you use one
typeface or two, be sure to choose common, polished - looking ones such as Helvetica,
Arial, Georgia, or Times New Roman.
Any
typeface that is not conservative (such as Helvetica, Times New Roman, Verdana,
Arial, Tahoma, or Calibri), or that is not a standard size, runs the same risk.
Arial and Times New Roman are standard
typefaces on most business computers.
Choose a standard
typeface, like
Arial, that is easy to read, common, and modern - looking.
Job seekers who want a sans - serif
typeface but don't want to use
Arial or Verdana can switch to Trebuchet MS.. According to ZipJob, this font was specifically designed to appear well on a screen.
Pick an easily legible, preferably a sans - serif font, e.g.
Arial, Cambria, Helvetica or any other similar
typeface.
Arial is maybe the most used
typeface in the world.
Structure your document in a clean, uncluttered layout and employ simple
typefaces like
Arial, Tahoma, Courier, or Georgia.