A portfolio for campus placements
In a placement drive, your résumé looks like everyone else's. A portfolio is how you get shortlisted and remembered — one link that proves your projects. Free for students, ready before the drive.
By Manan Agrawal, Founder · Updated June 10, 2026
A portfolio is the edge that gets you noticed in a crowded placement drive. It makes a lookalike résumé memorable, proves your projects, and gives interviewers something concrete to discuss. On SitesPlaced it is free for students, AI writes your content, and you publish at yourname.sitesplaced.com in minutes — well before companies arrive.
Generate your student portfolio in 60 seconds
Fill in four fields and watch a live preview build itself. When you like it, publish the real thing free on SitesPlaced — AI writes the first draft from your résumé.
No plan, no card. Publish at aisha-verma.sitesplaced.com
Portfolio
Aisha Verma
Software Engineer & Builder
VIT
About
Projects
Experience
Contact
Live preview · your real site is fully editable
Why do placements reward a portfolio?
A campus drive is a numbers game weighted against you: many students, similar CGPAs, the same coursework, and a recruiter skimming résumés fast. Anything that makes you stand out and stick in memory is worth a lot — and a portfolio link does both. It turns “another CSE student” into “the one who built that project.”
It also helps inside the interview. When you can say “I built this — here, let me show you” and open a live project, you shift the conversation from abstract questions to your real work, where you are strongest. That is a meaningful advantage in the final rounds.
Your placement-season checklist
Build it a few months early
Don't wait for the drive. Get your portfolio live ahead of season so it is polished when companies arrive.
Lead with relevant projects
Put the three to six projects closest to the roles you want at the top, each with a working link.
Put the link on your résumé
Add your portfolio link to your résumé header so it is the first thing recruiters see.
Keep it updated
Add internships, new projects and achievements as the season progresses so the link always shows your best.
What should you include for placements?
- ✓A one-line intro with your branch and target roles
- ✓Three to six projects with working links, most relevant first
- ✓Skills mapped to the companies visiting your campus
- ✓Internships, training and notable achievements
- ✓A contact section and your résumé link
Placement-ready portfolio templates
Live demos you can open and clone — recruiter-ready and free for students.
PopularFlagship — Student Portfolio
Recruiter-friendly, projects-first layout. The safe, strong default for placements and internships.
View live demo
ModernBento Portfolio
Apple-style bento grid that organises skills, projects and links into tidy, scannable tiles.
View live demo
CreativeAurora Portfolio
Soft-gradient, design-forward portfolio for students who want creative but still professional.
View live demo
ResumeResume Portfolio
Your CV as a website — a clean, linkable one-pager recruiters can skim in seconds.
View live demo
EditorialMagazine Portfolio
Editorial magazine layout for design, media and communication students with a strong visual story.
View live demo
MinimalvCard Portfolio
Compact digital visiting card — name, role, links and contact in one tidy, shareable page.
View live demoGet placement-ready — free
Pick a template, let AI draft your content from your résumé, and publish at yourname.sitesplaced.com before the drive. Free for students, no card — add the link to your résumé and walk in prepared.
Build my portfolio free →Frequently asked questions
Does a portfolio help in campus placements?
Yes. In a placement drive, hundreds of students have near-identical résumés. A portfolio with real projects is what gets you remembered in the shortlist and gives interviewers something concrete to discuss. On SitesPlaced it is free for students, so it is a low-effort, high-impact edge before the drive.
When should I prepare my placement portfolio?
Before placement season starts — ideally a few months ahead, so it is polished when companies arrive. Build it with your current projects, keep adding internships and work, and have the link ready on your résumé before the first drive.
What should a placement portfolio include?
A one-line intro with your branch and the roles you want, three to six projects with working links, your skills, internships and achievements, and a contact section with your résumé. Lead with the work most relevant to the companies visiting your campus.
How do I use my portfolio during placements?
Put the link in your résumé header so it is the first thing on your one-pager, share it in any pre-placement forms, and mention it in interviews when you discuss projects. When an interviewer can open your work mid-conversation, it strengthens your case immediately.
Is it free for placement-season students?
Yes. Students build and publish on SitesPlaced for free, premium templates included, with no card. You can have a placement-ready portfolio live in minutes.