Resume writing, without the fluff.
Practical guides on what changes the result: getting past the software that screens resumes, matching your resume to a posting, common mistakes, and the parts of AI tooling worth using. No 2,000-word intros. No filler.
ChatGPT vs Claude vs Gemini Cover Letters: 3 Drafts, 1 Reply
You ran your cover letter through ChatGPT. Then Claude. Then Gemini. All three sounded fine and got no reply. Here is the same job, three drafts side by side, the 3 places each model fails on cover letters, and the 3-Specifics Test the one draft that lands passes.
Read postChatGPT vs Claude vs Gemini for Resumes: 3 Bullets, 1 Winner
You ran your resume through ChatGPT, then Claude, then Gemini. The outputs all look fine and they all read like AI. Here is the 3-bullet test that shows which one to actually trust.
Read postHumanize an AI Resume: 3 Edits Recruiters Reply To (2026)
AI rewrote your resume and now it reads like every other AI-rewritten resume. 62 percent of employers reject those. The 3-Edit Pass keeps your voice in and the ATS keyword match too.
Read postCan recruiters tell if you used ChatGPT on your resume? The 7 AI tells (and the fix)
ATS systems do not flag AI-written resumes. Humans do, and 88 percent of hiring managers say they can tell. Here are the 7 tells they spot in 20 seconds, and the concrete swap for each one.
Read post15 ChatGPT prompts that actually rewrite your resume well (copy-paste ready)
Most ChatGPT "resume prompt" lists are 40 variations of "make my resume better." Here are 15 prompts I'd actually use, what each one fixes, and the trap they all share.
Read postShould you use AI to write your resume? An honest answer
AI is good at making thin bullets sharper. It is bad at writing your resume from scratch. The difference matters, because the wrong use case turns into a flagged-for-AI rejection.
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