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Clinical Research Coordinator Resume: Examples, Skills & Templates (2026)
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Clinical Research Coordinator Resume: Examples, Skills & Templates (2026)

Clinical Research Coordinator Resume: Examples, Skills & Templates (2026) A clinical research coordinator (CRC) resume has to accomplish something most healthcare resumes do not: it must simultaneously satisfy...

Clinical Research Coordinator Resume: Examples, Skills & Templates (2026)

A clinical research coordinator (CRC) resume has to accomplish something most healthcare resumes do not: it must simultaneously satisfy two very different audiences. The first is an ATS at a CRO, academic medical centre, sponsor, or device company, each running different keyword filters for different trial types and regulatory environments. The second is a hiring manager who will read your resume looking for specific signals: which phase trials you have managed, which EDC and CTMS software you have used, whether you hold a CCRC or CCRP credential, and whether your documentation and regulatory compliance language is current with ICH GCP E6(R3). This guide covers clinical research coordinator resume writing for all four employment settings, academic medical centre, CRO, pharma sponsor, and medical device, with setting-specific keyword tables, a complete certifications comparison, an EDC/CTMS software list, and three full resume examples at entry, mid-career, and senior level.


Four Settings, Four Keyword Profiles

The biggest gap in most CRC resume guides is treating “clinical research coordinator” as one job. It is not. A CRC at an academic medical centre manages IRB submissions, protocol amendments, and faculty principal investigator (PI) relationships. A CRC at a CRO works under sponsor oversight, manages monitoring visits, and is accountable to contract deliverables. A sponsor-side CRC focuses on site management, site qualification, and clinical operations. A device CRC adds IDE (Investigational Device Exemption) submissions, adverse event MDR reporting, and postmarket surveillance. Each setting has a distinct vocabulary, and the keywords that get you past the ATS at IQVIA will not necessarily get you past the one at an academic research hospital.

Setting Top ATS Keywords Role-Defining Tasks Common Employers
Academic Medical Centre (AMC) IRB submission, protocol amendment, informed consent, regulatory binder, continuing review, deviation reporting, CTSA, grant management IRB submissions and renewals, protocol compliance audits, faculty PI coordination, participant recruitment, NIH reporting, HIPAA documentation Hospital research offices, university clinical trials offices, NCI-designated cancer centres
CRO (Contract Research Org) GCP, monitoring visit, TMF (Trial Master File), source data verification, sponsor oversight, SOP compliance, site activation, SUSAR reporting, query resolution CRA/monitor visit preparation, query resolution in EDC, drug/device accountability, site closeout, lab specimen processing, adverse event reporting IQVIA, PPD (Thermo Fisher), Syneos Health, Covance (Labcorp), Parexel, Charles River
Pharma Sponsor IND application, CSR (Clinical Study Report), NDA/BLA support, protocol deviation, safety narrative, site management, vendor management, eTMF, clinical operations Site qualification, initiation, interim and close-out visits, CRF review, safety event management, clinical database lock support Pfizer, AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson, Merck, Eli Lilly, Genentech/Roche
Medical Device Company IDE (Investigational Device Exemption), MDR (Medical Device Report), 510(k), PMA, ISO 14155, device accountability, postmarket surveillance, adverse event reporting, FDA submission IDE study management, device complaint investigation, MDR reporting, notified body liaison, usability studies, PMS (postmarket surveillance) data collection Medtronic, Abbott, Boston Scientific, Becton Dickinson, Stryker, Johnson & Johnson MedTech

CRC Certifications: CCRC vs CCRP, What Goes on Your Resume

Two professional certification bodies dominate the CRC credential landscape: ACRP (Association of Clinical Research Professionals) offering the CCRC (Certified Clinical Research Coordinator), and SOCRA (Society of Clinical Research Associates) offering the CCRP (Certified Clinical Research Professional). Both are widely recognised by employers and appear in job postings interchangeably. Understanding the differences helps you decide which to pursue, and both will strengthen your resume significantly.

Credential Issuing Body Experience Requirement Exam / Renewal Best for
CCRC® ACRP (Association of Clinical Research Professionals) 1,500 hours as a CRC (or qualifying education programme); verifiable CRC experience required 125 MCQ exam; tested Feb–May and Jul–Oct annually. Renewal every 2 years with 24 CE credits. Exam fee: $435–$600. Note: Exam content transitioning to ICH GCP E6(R3) in Fall 2026. CROs, sponsor companies, and sites that specifically list CCRC in job descriptions; ACRP has larger membership and is slightly more recognised in US industry
CCRP® SOCRA (Society of Clinical Research Associates) 2 years / 3,500 hours of clinical research experience (or qualifying degree + 1 year) Computer-based exam at Prometric testing centres; exam content moving to E6(R3) as of Jan 1, 2026. Renewal every 3 years with 45 CE credits; fee $350. Candidates with more experience who want international recognition; SOCRA is a single credential covering both CRC and CRA functions, good for those bridging both roles

ICH GCP E6(R3), 2026 Update: What to Know for Your Resume

The International Council for Harmonisation updated its Good Clinical Practice guideline to E6(R3), which became effective in 2025. Both ACRP (Fall 2026 exam window) and SOCRA (January 1, 2026) are incorporating E6(R3) content into their certification exams. If you currently hold GCP certification under E6(R2), you should update your resume to reflect active participation in E6(R3) training if you have completed it. Employers in pharma and CROs increasingly note E6(R3) awareness as a preferred qualification in job postings for 2026. Relevant skills added by E6(R3) include risk-based monitoring, decentralised trial management, and remote source data verification, all of which are strong resume differentiators.

How to list certifications on your CRC resume

Correct: Certified Clinical Research Coordinator (CCRC®) · Association of Clinical Research Professionals (ACRP) · 2022 · Active

Correct: Certified Clinical Research Professional (CCRP®) · Society of Clinical Research Associates (SOCRA) · 2021 · Renewal 2024

GCP certification: Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Certification · TransCelerate / CITI Program · 2024 (note: list expiry or renewal date, GCP certs are typically valid 2–3 years)

In progress: Certified Clinical Research Coordinator (CCRC®), Exam scheduled May 2026


EDC, CTMS & Regulatory Software, Named Tools That Belong on Your Resume

One of the fastest ways to improve a CRC resume’s ATS performance is to replace generic phrases like “electronic data capture systems” with the actual software names. Sponsors, CROs, and sites post jobs with specific software requirements, and ATS systems match against those names. Listing the tools you have used, including version-specific names where relevant, signals technical readiness without overstating experience.

Category System / Software Used by / Common In
EDC (Electronic Data Capture) Medidata Rave (Rave EDC), Oracle Clinical / InForm, Veeva EDC (Vault EDC), REDCap, Castor EDC, OpenClinica Rave: Industry standard at large CROs and pharma; REDCap: Academic medical centres and investigator-initiated trials; Veeva EDC: Growing rapidly in pharma and device companies
CTMS (Clinical Trial Management System) Veeva Vault CTMS, Oracle CTMS (Siebel CTMS), Medidata CTMS, Florence eBinders, RealTime CTMS Veeva Vault CTMS: Dominant in pharma sponsor environments; Florence eBinders: Site management and regulatory document storage; RealTime: Site-based coordinators
eTMF (Electronic Trial Master File) Veeva Vault eTMF, Wingspan eTMF, Phlexglobal, Florence (Florence eBinders) Veeva: Large pharma and CROs; Florence: Common at investigator sites managing regulatory binders electronically
IRT / IWRS (Randomisation & Supply) Medidata Rave RTSM, BioClinica IRT, Almac IRT Used by sites and CROs on randomised, controlled Phase II–IV studies; signals Phase III experience
Safety / Pharmacovigilance Oracle Argus Safety, Veeva Vault Safety, MedWatch (FDA), CIOMS forms Argus: Large pharma safety teams; MedWatch: All US-based site coordinators filing SAE reports to FDA
IRB / Regulatory Submissions Advarra eReg (formerly Advarra IRB), Copernicus (WIRB), iRIS, Quovant Academic and hospital sites submitting regulatory documents electronically; Advarra and WIRB are two of the largest central IRBs in the US

CRC Resume Skills: Hard Skills by Phase + Soft Skills

Hard Skills, Core CRC

Good Clinical Practice (GCP) · ICH E6(R3) · IRB submission and approval · Informed consent process · Protocol deviation management · Case report form (CRF) completion · Adverse event (AE) reporting · Serious adverse event (SAE) reporting · SUSAR reporting · Source document verification · Regulatory binder management · HIPAA compliance · Study start-up and initiation · Site closeout · Specimen processing and chain of custody · Lab requisition and central lab coordination · Drug/device accountability log management

Hard Skills, Phase-Specific

Phase I / FIH: PK sampling, dose escalation management, safety observation, intensive monitoring schedule
Phase II–III: Multi-site coordination, randomisation via IRT/RTSM, blinded study management, patient retention strategy, monitoring visit hosting
Phase III (pivotal): Protocol amendment management, interim analysis preparation, database lock support, eTMF maintenance
Phase IV / PMS: Postmarket surveillance data collection, real-world evidence, registry management, MDR reporting (device)

Soft Skills (Use These in Bullets, Not Just the Skills List)

Attention to detail · Cross-functional communication · Patient-facing communication · Deadline management (trial milestones) · Conflict resolution (sponsor vs PI) · Multilingual patient interaction (list specific language if applicable) · Organised under regulatory audit conditions · Training and onboarding research staff

Therapeutic Area Keywords (Add the One(s) Relevant to You)

Oncology · Cardiovascular · Neurology · Immunology / Autoimmune · Rare disease / Orphan drug · Infectious disease · Respiratory · Endocrinology / Metabolic · Dermatology · Ophthalmology · Paediatric studies · Geriatric studies · Women’s health


Three CRC Resume Examples

Example 1, Entry-Level CRC (No Direct CRC Experience)

Clinical Research Coordinator Resume, Entry Level

MAYA PATEL, B.S.

Boston, MA · (617) 555-0183 · maya.patel@email.com · linkedin.com/in/mayapatel

SUMMARY

Life sciences graduate with a B.S. in Biology from Boston University and 18 months of research laboratory experience managing data collection, regulatory documentation, and IRB protocol compliance at BU’s Clinical Research Centre. CITI GCP-certified. Seeking an entry-level Clinical Research Coordinator role in an oncology or Phase II–III setting.

EXPERIENCE

Research Laboratory Assistant

Boston University Clinical Research Centre · Boston, MA · Jan 2024 – Present (part-time)

• Maintained regulatory binders for 4 active IRB-approved studies; prepared and submitted 6 continuing reviews and 2 protocol amendments with zero deficiencies identified on annual compliance audit

• Managed informed consent process for 38 study participants across 2 investigator-initiated trials; documented all consents in REDCap and maintained source documentation per GCP guidelines

• Processed and shipped 120+ biospecimen samples (blood and saliva) to a central laboratory following chain-of-custody SOPs; 100% sample integrity rate with no lost or mislabelled specimens

• Entered CRF data for 2 studies in REDCap; resolved 14 data queries from the principal investigator within 48-hour turnaround target on every occasion

Healthcare Scribe

Massachusetts General Hospital · Boston, MA · Jun 2023 – Dec 2023

• Documented clinical encounters for 25–35 patients per shift in Epic EHR, producing physician-reviewed notes with <0.5% amendment rate

• Developed familiarity with medical terminology across general medicine, oncology, and cardiology patient populations

EDUCATION

Bachelor of Science, Biology

Boston University · Boston, MA · May 2024 · GPA: 3.72

Relevant Coursework: Clinical Research Methods, Biostatistics, Research Ethics, Human Physiology

CERTIFICATIONS & SKILLS

Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Certification · CITI Program · 2024 (valid 3 years)

HIPAA Research Training · BU HRPP · 2024

Software: REDCap · Epic EHR · Microsoft Office Suite · Adobe Acrobat (regulatory document management)

Example 2, Mid-Career CRC (CRO / Academic Site Background)

Clinical Research Coordinator Resume, Mid-Career

DEREK WASHINGTON, CCRC®

Durham, NC · (919) 555-0247 · d.washington@email.com · linkedin.com/in/derekwashington-crc

SUMMARY

CCRC-certified Clinical Research Coordinator with 5 years of experience managing Phase II–III oncology and cardiovascular trials at both academic sites and CRO settings. Proficient in Medidata Rave, Veeva Vault, and Florence eBinders. Track record of 100% monitoring visit readiness, <72-hour query resolution, and zero critical findings on sponsor audits across 8 trials. Experienced with ICH GCP E6(R2) and actively completing E6(R3) transition training.

EXPERIENCE

Clinical Research Coordinator II

Duke University Medical Centre · Durham, NC · Mar 2022 – Present

• Manage 6 concurrent Phase II–III oncology trials (solid tumour and haematologic malignancy); coordinate consent, eligibility screening, and treatment administration visits for an average of 45 active participants per month

• Achieved <72-hour query turnaround rate of 97% in Medidata Rave across all 6 studies; recognised by IQVIA monitoring team as a top-5 site for data quality in a 120-site Phase III trial

• Prepared and submitted 18 IRB continuing reviews, 4 protocol amendments, and 2 SAE reports in Advarra eReg with zero regulatory deficiencies over a 3-year period

• Hosted 22 sponsor and CRO monitoring visits (pre-study, initiation, interim, closeout); maintained 100% TMF compliance in Florence eBinders for all active studies

• Trained and onboarded 3 junior CRCs on GCP documentation standards, protocol-specific procedures, and EDC entry; all 3 passed sponsor training assessments on first attempt

Clinical Research Coordinator

Syneos Health (site coordinator, contracted to Pfizer) · Remote/Durham, NC · Aug 2020 – Feb 2022

• Coordinated 3 Phase III cardiovascular trials across a 200-patient site; managed participant scheduling, IRT-based drug dispensing, and lab specimen shipment to central laboratory

• Maintained drug accountability logs with 100% reconciliation at closeout across all 3 studies

• Resolved 98% of monitoring queries within 5 business days; site ranked in top quartile for query resolution speed among 85 participating sites

CERTIFICATIONS & EDUCATION

Certified Clinical Research Coordinator (CCRC®) · ACRP · 2021 · Active (renewal 2025)

Good Clinical Practice (GCP) Certification · CITI Program · 2023

ICH GCP E6(R3) Transition Training · ACRP · In Progress (2026)

B.S., Public Health · University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · 2020

EDC/CTMS: Medidata Rave · Veeva Vault (CTMS + eTMF) · Florence eBinders · REDCap · Oracle InForm · Advarra eReg

Example 3, Senior CRC / Lead CRC Transitioning to Medical Device Sales

Many experienced CRCs use their deep knowledge of medical terminology, FDA regulatory frameworks, device accountability, and clinical trial data to transition into medical device sales representative roles. This is one of the most natural career pivots in the industry, and for resumes for medical sales positions, the framing shifts from compliance-focused language to commercial-impact language. The hard skills transfer; the resume framing changes.

CRC Skills That Translate Directly to a Medical Device Sales Rep Resume

CRC: Device accountability log management → Sales: Inventory management and asset tracking

CRC: IDE protocol knowledge → Sales: Deep clinical product knowledge and indication understanding

CRC: Principal investigator relationship management → Sales: KOL (key opinion leader) relationship development

CRC: Surgical site or procedure room familiarity → Sales: OR/procedure room presence and clinical support

CRC: Adverse event and device complaint reporting → Sales: Product issue escalation and complaint handling

CRC: Training clinical staff on protocol procedures → Sales: In-service and product training for clinical teams

CRC → Medical Device Sales Resume, Career Pivot

SARAH OKONKWO, CCRP®

Minneapolis, MN · (612) 555-0391 · s.okonkwo@email.com · linkedin.com/in/sarahokonkwo

SUMMARY

CCRP-certified clinical research professional with 7 years of IDE device trial management at Medtronic-sponsored sites and Boston Scientific Phase III programmes. Extensive OR and cath lab presence across cardiac rhythm management, structural heart, and vascular device studies. Seeking to leverage deep clinical and device knowledge in a Medical Device Sales Representative role, experienced in KOL relationship management, clinical in-servicing, and FDA device regulatory requirements.

EXPERIENCE

Lead Clinical Research Coordinator, Device Studies

Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation · Minneapolis, MN · Jan 2019 – Present

• Managed 8 IDE-regulated cardiac device trials (4 PMA, 4 de novo); coordinated device accountability, procedure scheduling, and adverse event reporting for 200+ enrolled patients

• Served as primary site contact for Medtronic and Boston Scientific clinical operations teams; hosted 35+ sponsor visits and maintained 100% device accountability reconciliation at each closeout

• Provided clinical in-service training to 12 cath lab nurses and 4 fellows on device-specific study procedures; developed training materials adopted by 3 other sites in the trial network

• Built relationships with 8 interventional cardiologist PIs and 4 device company medical affairs directors, managed PI correspondence, protocol queries, and sponsor escalations independently

• Contributed device-specific recruitment strategy that enrolled 140% of target within the original 18-month enrolment window across 2 pivotal trials

CERTIFICATIONS

Certified Clinical Research Professional (CCRP®) · SOCRA · 2020 · Active

Good Clinical Practice (GCP) / ISO 14155 (Medical Device GCP) · CITI Program · 2024


Getting Your First CRC Role: The No-Experience Pathway

The most common question from life sciences graduates is how to get hired as a clinical research coordinator with no prior CRC experience. The answer is: demonstrate the component skills through adjacent roles, build the required credentials, and be explicit about the connection in your resume summary. Most entry-level CRC job postings list GCP certification, attention to regulatory documentation, and basic EDC familiarity as requirements, not years of CRC job titles.

1

Get CITI GCP certified

The CITI Program’s Good Clinical Practice course is free at many institutions and costs ~$110 independently. It is the most commonly required qualification for entry-level CRC roles and takes 1–2 days to complete. List it immediately on your resume once certified.

2

Pursue adjacent experience: research assistant, clinical scribe, or phlebotomist

A research assistant role, even part-time, that exposes you to IRB documentation, REDCap, informed consent, or specimen processing is the most direct bridge. Clinical scribe roles demonstrate familiarity with medical terminology and EHR systems. Phlebotomy experience demonstrates patient contact in a clinical setting. Any of these roles, framed correctly on a resume, signals CRC readiness.

3

Target investigator-initiated trials (IITs), ideal for no experience CRC candidates

IIT coordinator roles are often the most accessible entry point into clinical research, smaller trials, lower sponsor scrutiny, and academic employers who value training potential over existing trial experience. Once you have 12–18 months of IIT experience, you are competitive for CRO and pharma sponsor positions.

4

Learn REDCap before your first interview

REDCap is free via Vanderbilt’s consortium and widely used in academic research. Completing the training modules and practising data entry takes a weekend. Listing “REDCap (self-trained)” on your resume signals initiative and specific EDC familiarity that many entry-level candidates do not have.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What should be on a clinical research coordinator resume?

A clinical research coordinator resume should include: a summary highlighting your phase experience, therapeutic area, certifications, and key software; a work experience section with quantified achievements (number of trials managed, participants enrolled, monitoring visits hosted, query resolution rates); a certifications section listing your CCRC or CCRP credential with issuing body and year; an education section; and a skills section naming specific EDC systems (Medidata Rave, REDCap, Veeva Vault), CTMS, GCP certification, and therapeutic area keywords. Tailor the keywords to the specific setting, academic, CRO, sponsor, or device, for the best ATS performance.

What is the difference between CCRC and CCRP certifications?

The CCRC (Certified Clinical Research Coordinator) is issued by ACRP and requires 1,500 hours of verified CRC experience (or completion of an approved education programme). The CCRP (Certified Clinical Research Professional) is issued by SOCRA and requires 3,500 hours or two years of clinical research experience. Both are widely recognised and respected by employers. ACRP is generally considered slightly more prevalent in US industry job postings; SOCRA’s CCRP is valued for its broader scope covering both CRC and CRA functions. Both exams are transitioning to ICH GCP E6(R3) content in 2026.

How do you write a medical device sales rep resume from a CRC background?

Reframe your CRC experience around commercial-relevant skills: IDE device knowledge becomes deep product and indication expertise; PI relationship management becomes KOL development; clinical staff training becomes in-service and education delivery; and procedure room presence (cath lab, OR, endoscopy suite) becomes a direct qualification for sales roles requiring clinical access. Lead your summary with “seeking to leverage clinical research expertise in a medical device sales role” and quantify the commercial indicators of your research work, devices studied, procedures observed, physicians engaged, and geographic territory of any multi-site trial involvement. Resumes for medical sales should still include your CCRP or CCRC certification, it is a significant differentiator over candidates from purely sales backgrounds.


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Steven H.
Career Writing Expert

Career advice writer at VantageResume, helping job seekers craft resumes and LinkedIn profiles that get noticed.