There are plenty of ways to incorporate second-page pharmacy careers experience on the first page. For example, you can fold certain accomplishments into your objective/summary section, create a brand new introductory section, tighten your formatting, or build a functional resume to replace your chronological one. Another option is to develop what’s called a networking résumé which is a 1-page shortened version of your extended résumé that you can pass out in place of, or alongside your business card. Still, if you feel all of the accomplishments stated on your pharmacy resume are relevant to your current pharmacy job objective, having a 2-page (or even 3-page) résumé isn’t going to knock you out of the race; just make sure your first page is strong enough by itself to get you the interview. Whatever the length of your résumé, make sure it tells a compelling story. Make sure it reflects the real you. Honestly and completely.