You’re not surprised to see this here, are you? There’s a reason it’s commonplace advice: Your resume really matters. As the first look into who you are, where you’ve come from, and what you’ve accomplished, it has to be be up-to-date, typo-free, and relevant to your industry and the jobs you’ve set your sights on. (Most hiring managers don’t want to know about your brief bartending stint two summers ago when you were figuring out how to transition to interior design.)
Focus on listing your most important work experiences, getting rid of that objective statement, and quantifying your bullet points. (Which, yes, you can do even if your job doesn’t involve numbers.) While you’ll have to tailor it for each position, getting it into shape will make that a much shorter task, rather than an all-day event.
Oh, and do yourself a favor and have a friend (or a coach) look it over and give you a brutally honest assessment.