5 Signals You’re at a Career Crossroads (Even If Your Career Looks Fine on Paper)

Many professionals reach a point where something shifts.

On paper, everything still looks good.
You’re competent. Experienced. Reliable.

But something doesn’t feel the same.

The work that once challenged you now feels routine.
The environment may have changed.
Leadership may be difficult.
Or perhaps... you’ve outgrown the role you once worked so hard to secure.

This is often the moment when people begin to wonder:

Is it time for something different?

But leaving is rarely an easy decision.

Because staying feels safe…
while moving feels uncertain.

Over the years, I’ve noticed there are usually a few clear signals when someone has reached a career crossroads.

Here are five that come up repeatedly.

1. You feel capable — but no longer challenged

You’re still performing well.

But the role no longer stretches you in the way it once did.
What used to feel energising now feels routine.

This often signals that your capabilities have grown beyond the role itself.

2. You feel stuck, even though you’re good at what you do

Many professionals assume feeling stuck means they lack options.

In reality, it often means something else:
the next move requires strategy rather than effort.

More hard work in the same role won’t necessarily create new opportunities.

3. You find yourself questioning the environment

Sometimes the work itself is still meaningful.

But leadership challenges, toxic dynamics, or shifting organisational culture make it difficult to do your best work.

In these situations the real question becomes:

Is the issue the role… or the environment around it?

4. You start wondering whether you need to “reinvent” yourself

At this stage many professionals ask questions like:

Do I need another qualification?
How do I reposition my experience?
How would I transition into another sector?
How do I increase my visibility without losing credibility?

These questions are rarely about capability.

They’re usually about clarity and positioning.

5. You want more — but you’re not entirely sure what “more” means

This is perhaps the most common signal.

You know you’re ready for the next stage of your career.
But defining that next stage is not always obvious.

And without that clarity, even a new role can end up feeling very similar to the one you left.

A different way to think about career crossroads

Feeling stuck doesn’t necessarily mean something has gone wrong.

Often it means something has evolved.

Your expectations of leadership may have changed.
Your appetite for meaningful work may have grown.
Your ambitions may now stretch beyond the role you currently occupy.

That shift is not a problem.

It’s a signal.

And sometimes the most valuable step at a career crossroads is simply giving yourself the space to pause, reflect, and think more strategically about what comes next — rather than feeling trapped by decisions you made earlier in your career.

Because careers are not meant to remain static.

They are meant to evolve.

I’m curious:

Have you ever experienced a moment where your career looked successful on paper… but something internally told you it might be time for a change?

What was the signal that made you start questioning your next move?
 
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  • It's happened twice in my work life - once after running a small business for about 10 yrs. Again, after traveling and guiding wellness workshops and... classes for about 5 years. I'm a self-motivated go getter, but once I get the go... I lose momentum. I enjoy the challenge of the chase but find it difficult to stay within the role once I hit the goal, like there is no satisfaction. I've been doing some self-study over the last couple of years to understand more about myself and how to find satisfaction in current work and stay with it to enter a softer phase, but it's also a part of who I am-- the competitive side.  more

Employers shocked that 1 in 5 Gen Z job seekers has a parent contact...


Mommies and daddies hold their little ones' hands when they're crossing the street. But once those little ones are big enough to interview for corporate jobs, it's time to let go -- that's the argument from employers who are stunned by the number of Gen Zers whose parents are job hunting on their behalf.

It's an alarming trend spurred by the nearly 50% of youngsters who tap mom and dad to write... their resumes -- and the 21% who actually have their folks contact prospective bosses directly, per a 2026 report.

And executives have had enough.

"Zoomers, do not send your mother to my office," scolded a hiring manager, wagging her finger at the wave of 20-somethings who can't stand on their own two feet, in a trending video. "Don't have your mother call me on my phone, call my assistant, [or] talk to my other staff about you coming to my office to be an intern."

"If you cannot have a conversation with me, if you cannot have an interview like grown people do without your parents being involved," she continued, "if that is where your anxiety is, this is not the place for you."

Putting Gen Zs -- adults under age 27 -- in their place is no easy task, owing to the oft-maligned demographic's propensity towards entitlement, laziness and unpreparedness in the workplace, according to recent reports.

To mask their shortcomings, the newbies to big business are shamelessly letting mom do their dirty work, while they kick back and collect the checks.

Researchers for Zety, a virtual career services hub, surveyed 1,001 Zers to determine just how severely the group relies on their heads-of-house for help in the industry.

The poll found that a staggering 44% of Zers get their parents' support in résumé and CV writing, while one in five task them with contacting a potential employer or recruiter for a position.

Moreover, a shocking 20% of parents are joining their grown-up kiddos on interviews, and 10% are even negotiating their big babies' salaries directly with employers.

"Early parental involvement suggests that many Gen Z workers view job searching as a collaborative process rather than an individual milestone," the study authors noted. "This support may help candidates feel more prepared, but it also raises questions about how and when young professionals begin developing independent career skills."

Getting mommy's support may seem like a sweet gesture, but it's leaving a bad taste in business leaders' mouths.

"We had a 20-year-old come in for a job interview at the salon. She brought her mom with her," a hairdresser wrote in the caption of a clip related to the questionable move. "Now listen, I'm all for supportive parents. But was definitely caught off guard ... At what point do you step back and let your kids stand on their own?"

"Is this confidence-building support," she asked her online audience, "or does it send the wrong message in a professional setting?"

And, unsurprisingly, older 9-to-5ers are unimpressed with Gen Z's seemingly immature mess.

"Instant pass on that application," roared an outraged commenter.

"Definitely a red flag," another wrote, in part. Similar sentiments were echoed by a separate naysayer, who deemed the needy, unmanned Gen Z "instantly unhireable."

"I had a girl bring her mom, too," an executive commented. "I didn't hire her."
 
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  • Parents should help their children...I disagree with your opinion

Writing an effective résumé


A résumé is your first introduction to a potential employer, and your chance to make a strong impression before you step into an interview.

A well-crafted résumé doesn't just list your past jobs; it highlights your achievements, skills, and the value you can bring to a company. In today's competitive job market, where recruiters may spend only a few seconds scanning each résumé, the... quality of your résumé can make all the difference between getting noticed and getting overlooked.

Creating a standout résumé doesn't have to be complicated. With attention to detail and a focus on relevance, you can craft a document that communicates professionalism and purpose.

Here are some top tips to help your résumé rise to the top of the pile:

Keep it concise. Your résumé should be short and focused, offering a clear snapshot of your skills, experience and accomplishments. Aim for two to three pages if you have extensive experience.

Highlight your most relevant experience. List your previous positions in reverse chronological order, placing your most recent and applicable roles first. Employers are most interested in what you've done lately and how it relates to their opening.

Show your achievements. Don't just describe responsibilities, quantify results where possible. Use strong action verbs to show how you solved problems or improved processes.

Tailor it to your target job. Define your goal clearly and adapt your résumé for each position. Focus on the skills and experience most relevant to that role, and remove anything unrelated that might distract from your strengths.

Include key sections. At minimum, list your contact details, education, and employment history. You can also include certifications, technical skills, or relevant volunteer work that adds value.

Use a clean, readable layout. Keep your format simple and professional with consistent fonts, spacing and headings. Avoid large blocks of text and ensure everything is easy to read both on-screen and on paper.

Be cautious with creative designs. A visually designed résumé can stand out, but it's best for situations where you'll hand it out in person such as career fairs or networking events. Many companies use Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS), which may struggle to read graphic-heavy résumés. For online applications, stick to a plain, text-based version that's ATS-friendly.

Proofread carefully. Errors in spelling or grammar can quickly undermine your professionalism. Review your résumé thoroughly or ask someone else to look it over before sending it out.

Include a thoughtful cover letter. Accompany your résumé with a short, personalised letter explaining your interest in the role and why you'd be a great fit.

By following these tips, you'll create a résumé that not only presents your qualifications clearly but also positions you as a confident, capable professional ready for your next opportunity.
 
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  • The only effective resume is a head-hunters resume because if a client interview one of their candidates and hires them, they are paid. Quite a bit... too!

    Theres a strategic way to develop a master resume, which can be copy & pasted to a new doc, and scaled down each time to match the job requirements.

    That’s just basic, by showing the hiring manager that this candidate has what they want without all the fluff & stuff.

    The master resume has EVERYTHING on it, so scaling is quick and easy each job submission. Oh! It should be bulletized.
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  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:

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I landed a job by cold emailing the CEO. Nothing else worked for me.


Job seekers should focus on personalized outreach instead of traditional résumés and cover letters.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Cathy Xie, a 25-year-old marketing professional based in Toronto. It's been edited for length and clarity.

I remember opening my laptop about a month into my job hunt, seeing yet another automated rejection, and feeling this kind of collapsing... desperation. I knew I needed to do something different in my approach if I wanted to stand out in the job market.

I tried three new job-finding strategies, but I didn't get hired until I sent an email directly to a CEO with the subject line "My landlord inspired this email."

Job seekers should be thinking less about their résumé and cover letters, and more about how they can get a potential employer's attention.

In 2024, I founded a startup aimed at helping students and new grads with unconventional backgrounds pivot into tech and navigate the job market. Unfortunately, we had to shut down about a year and a half later due to changes in the market. It's a little ironic that the tech job market is what put me back on the job hunt.

After mass applying to roles across marketing, product, and growth, largely targeting tech and AI companies, I felt drained. I was also spending so much time doom-scrolling on TikTok, watching video after video of young Gen Z job seekers talking about their frustrations with the job market.

Job searching was always in the back of my mind, and I knew it was time to try a different approach.

The first route I tried was referrals, but those were not a huge success.

My next approach was scouring niche startup boards, subscribing to free newsletters that posted about startups hiring, and even following LinkedIn creators who report on startups that had just raised. Then I'd apply directly through the company's website and try to email someone on the team who would likely be my manager for that position. Though I didn't end up with a job from that approach, it was still a great way to network.

My last approach, cold emailing a founder, ultimately landed me my new role. I'd been following this founder's journey on LinkedIn for a while because I was passionate about his startup's mission to address the housing crisis in major cities. He posted that he was hiring a marketing manager and included a link to apply. I thought to myself, "I am not applying the traditional way again."

I had just come across a social media post from someone about how cold emailing helped them achieve so many of their life goals, and how rejection was redirection. It made me think maybe I should just email the founder directly. I had nothing to lose.

I know, as a founder, you get thousands of emails, so I needed to make sure my email was one he had to open.

It was also important to me to make my email as personal as possible because I think it's a lost art. Especially with AI, we've become overly formal with writing. My subject line was "My landlord inspired this email" because I thought it was funny and might grab his attention.

In the body, I introduced myself, described my past roles and how they prepared me for this job, and wrote about my passion for and interest in the startup itself. I tried to keep it personable and a little funny. I kept it around 150 words, so it was short and sweet.

He responded just over a week later by emailing me back and messaging me on LinkedIn to set up an intro call with him and the CMO. After two more interviews, including an intro to a case study and a case study presentation, I was offered the role of marketing manager.

The job has been great so far, and my team is amazing.

The first two questions a lot of people ask themselves when applying to a job are "How should I write my résumé?" and "How should I write my cover letter?"

However, I think the question you should ask yourself instead is, "How can I get the attention of this person?" Once you ask yourself how you can get in front of a person, you open up so many ways to approach this job hunt, rather than just doing the traditional cold application.

With this wave of AI, it's so easy not to put in effort with job applications and just mass apply. But I think what comes with getting people's attention is putting in the effort.

You can spend a few hours cold applying and maybe get one or two automated emails, or you can spend those hours doing a couple of very personalized outreaches. It will take effort, but I think it's important to put that effort in if you want to stand out in today's job market.
 
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  • I Like It! Old School Networking & Strategic Selection! Congrats!

  • That’s an insightful experience and a strong reminder that job searching today often requires more strategy than simply submitting applications.

    Cold... outreach,when done thoughtfully, ca indeed cut through the noise of automated systems and large applicant pools. What stands out in this story is not just the act of emailing a CEO but the level of **intentionality behind it**: researching the founder, understanding the company’s mission, crafting a compelling subject line, and keeping the message concise and personal. That kind of effort demonstrates initiative and genuine interest, which many employers value highly.

    At the same time, this approach highlights an important shift in the hiring landscape. With AI making it easier to mass-apply, personalized engagement and authentic communication are becoming stronger differentiators. Whether through cold outreach, networking, or thoughtful follow-ups, candidates who invest time in meaningful connections often position themselves more
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Survey finds Gen Z leaning heavily on parents to navigate challenging job market


ARLINGTON, Va. (7News) -- Driven by anxiety and frustration with a soft job market, Gen Z job seekers are relying on support from a source close to home: their parents.

According to a recent survey from the online platform ResumeTemplates.com, parental involvement in both the job search and early career path of the 18-to-23-year-olds polled is surprisingly high.

"I think they're trying to be... helpful, but unfortunately, it's a little too much in some cases," said Juliet Toothacre, Chief Career Strategist for ResumeTemplates.com.

In January, the company polled 1,000 Gen-Zers who'd searched for jobs within the past two years. Among the findings:

* 75% of Gen-Zers admitted a parent had submitted a job application for them

* 51% said a parent sat in on multiple job interviews.

* 67% said a parent had repeatedly spoken with a manager.

"The interviewing statistics that we got really blew me away, because I felt like it was a high number of parents that were way too involved in the interview process," Toothacre told 7News.

SEE ALSO | Family business ties to Wreaths Across America prompts questions from watchdog group

The survey also found Gen Z men were more likely than women to involve a parent in a career path decision or workplace activity.

A recent report from the National Association of Colleges and Employers found that more than half of employers rate the job market for this year's college seniors as either fair or poor, the highest levels since the pandemic year of 2020-21.

Uncertainty and anxiety in a weak job market may be driving the level of parental involvement, Toothacre said.

At last week's University of Maryland job fair, 85 different employers were on hand to meet face-to-face with the more than 3,000 students who'd registered to attend, according to a school spokesperson.

Ethan Fontenot, a senior majoring in economics, told 7News the job market is bleak.

"It's pretty difficult. I mean, that's why everyone's here, I guess," Fontenot said.

Fontenot said he's sent out hundreds of resumes weekly and has yet to find a promising lead.

"I had an interview the other week where I thought it was going be a real person, but it was just an AI chatbot talking to me," Fontenot said.

Alesya Kolosey, a University of Maryland senior majoring in English, said AI-driven algorithms have been scanning her résumés and discounting her experience.

"So, I get a lot of declining emails, a lot of people who don't even bother to reach out again," Kolosey said.

Allynn Powell, Director of the University of Maryland Career Center, said "people are hiring," but added, "what might be the case is they're hiring in smaller numbers."

"We want to equip parents and families holistically with information on how to support their students but really encourage students in their own development to figure out the tools, the steps, and kind of move in the direction of being autonomous as they go about that job search," Powell said with respect to the degree of parental involvement with this generation of job seekers.

Christina Mitchell, a Talent Acquisition Specialist for MedStar Health, said the company is looking to fill 700 jobs.

"I wouldn't necessarily apply for your child or call for your child, give them the independence to be able to do that themselves," Mitchell said, adding that she's personally experienced parents reaching out on behalf of their children.

Not every Gen Z job seeker is overly dependent on support from home.

Kolosey, the daughter of Ukrainian immigrants, said she has several friends whose parents send emails and resumes, parents who "are very involved in job searches."

Kolosey said she's had to navigate her job search on her own.

"I think being more independent, and kind of having a voice and talking to people is better because, when you're working a job, you're the one working there, not your parents," Kolosey said.

Graduate student Emma McNamara agreed. McNamara, a business management major as an undergraduate student, said she's gotten some help from her mom with networking but is otherwise conducting her own job search.

"I think we're hardworking. I think that we are dedicated and that we want to be innovative and really driven. That's how I would describe our generation," McNamara said.

"Gen Z is smart," Toothacre said. "I think they're more scrappy than people give them credit for and we have to allow them to do that. So, I really hope the parents that are listening, they just give their kids a little bit of space to do that."
 
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    Marketing
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    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.

    Regards
     more

  • What a waste of precious minds. As a parent, I have prepped resumes for my boys but made them work on drafts first. But I’m a professional head-hunter... so they learned my strategic skills, but not all parents are head hunters. You have to let them fall on their faces from time to time or how will they handle pressure on the job? Automation has killed motivation today! AI will soon outrank everyone. These young people need to fall so teach them to fall forward, get up and keep moving forward. It’s ROCKY 101 more

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  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:

    Marketing
    Psychology
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    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.

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     more

  • You Start Monday. A coffee goes a long way when management feels comfortable. Happy to hear you clicked with this organization. Now onward & upward!

1   
  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:

    Marketing
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    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.

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  • It sounds deceitful. This is a good indicator of your work environment and can assist, moving forward. Watch more what people (some supervisors in... some workplaces) do than what they say. more

Asana's new CEO says getting a job in Silicon Valley isn't harder for Gen Z than it was for him -- he shares his own 'donut box' hack for getting hired


Getting a job in Silicon Valley is so cutthroat that some ambitious unemployed twenty‑somethings are literally hand‑delivering donut boxes stuffed with their résumés to founders' front desks, hoping it will make them stand out for the hottest tech roles. But that's nothing new, says Dan Rogers, the new CEO of the $1.8 billion workflow software company Asana.

Although Gen Zers are facing layoffs,... hiring freezes, and AI anxiety at an unprecedented rate, landing a job at the HQs of Apple, Meta, and Alphabet "has always been a long shot," Rogers warns.

He would know: Rogers is one of the few British Silicon Valley CEOs. He started out in the small town of Grimsby -- better known as the butt of a Sacha Baron Cohen movie than as a tech launchpad -- and worked his way up to the top job in San Francisco via stints at Dell, Microsoft, Amazon Web Services, Salesforce, ServiceNow, and more.

"I don't remember it being easy back in the day, honestly," he exclusively tells Fortune of breaking into Silicon Valley. "For me, for example, it was never going to be possible that I'd go straight to the hottest tech company in the hottest role. I always felt like I was going to have to work my way in, and I was going to have to work through experiences elsewhere that I would shine at."

And now that Rogers is in the prime position of hiring and shaping the Bay Area's workforce, he says that's still the case." Despite the explosion of AI creating more tech jobs, competition for those entry-level roles is just as hard.

Ask Rogers for advice on the next generation trying to crack California's tech scene, and he doesn't have a quick hiring hack or an interview stunt.

Instead, he recommends quietly building a résumé that's impossible to ignore -- even if it takes years and detours through less prestigious companies. Or as he put it: "Maybe come into the side door instead of the front door."

Rogers stresses that landing an entry-level job, internship or grad scheme directly at one of after graduating "is a long shot." Not impossible, but unlikely. For most Gen Zers, he says, the best route in is to build credible experience somewhere that'll teach you the tech skills the big names will eventually want.

"For those of us that go don't get through the front door, it's okay," he adds. "There are side doors along the way, and you've just got to build towards that."

"There are incredible experiences that you can get, maybe in smaller companies, maybe in a slightly different region, maybe in a slightly adjacent category. After a stint there, you would be super valuable."

Rogers is proof that a rejection letter from your dream tech company isn't the end. He too, had to work his way up the ranks through "side doors" to get to where he is today. "My story ends in Silicon Valley," he says. "But in the interim, I did really important roles in Texas. I did really important roles in Seattle, etc."

By the time he finally made it to San Francisco, he'd stacked enough varied experience that he could pull from a deep toolkit -- what he jokingly calls his "donut box" version of presenting himself to tech bosses.

Ultimately, if you chip away at building skills in your twenties, the salary and title will come later. It's slower than a literal donut box stunt (or even shooting bosses' cold emails, or wearing a placard sign asking for work), but far more reliable.

"I once received some advice from someone, and they said learning before earning," he adds. "You should make sure that the learning phase of your career extends as long as possible before you even think about the earning phase."

"What that really meant for me was there's no shortcut to putting the building blocks in place that you're going to need to be successful."
 
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    Marketing
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    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.

    Regards
     more

  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:

    Marketing
    Psychology
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    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.

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     more

  • Your boss is also human. She may be passing through issues. Relax and manage your time well

Crafting an Impactful Brag Sheet: Examples and Tips for Success


Crafting a compelling brag sheet is a pivotal step for anyone looking to highlight their achievements effectively, whether for job applications, scholarship opportunities, or other personal or professional endeavors. Understanding what a brag sheet example looks like can provide invaluable guidance in creating your own version. In this article, we will delve into various brag sheet examples and... offer tips on how to construct a document that showcases your strengths with clarity and professionalism.

Why a Brag Sheet Example Matters

A brag sheet serves as a concise compilation of your skills, accomplishments, and experiences. It acts as a personal reference guide, helping you to succinctly convey your most relevant achievements to potential employers or selection panels. Reviewing a brag sheet example can help you understand how to structure your own, ensuring that it is both comprehensive and easy to read.

Whether presenting information for a job interview or applying for a scholarship, a well-curated brag sheet can make a significant difference. It offers a structured way for the reader to assess your qualifications quickly. To explore more on drafting related documents, consider reading about crafting the perfect personal statement for scholarship success.

Components of a Brag Sheet

Each section of your brag sheet should be thoughtfully crafted to highlight different aspects of your experiences and achievements. Here are key components to include based on typical brag sheet examples:

1. Basic Information

Start with your personal details. This should include your full name, contact information, and, if applicable, your LinkedIn profile. Ensure this section is straightforward and accessible.

2. Academic Achievements

List your academic qualifications, including degrees obtained, institutions attended, and any significant academic awards or honors. This section is crucial for a scholarship or academic-focused brag sheet sample.

3. Professional Experience

Summarize your work experiences, listing employers, job titles, and responsibilities. Highlight accomplishments or projects you've led, using specific metrics or outcomes where possible. This can be particularly impactful in a professional example brag sheet.

4. Skills and Certifications

Include any relevant skills, certifications, or licenses. This might encompass language proficiency, technical skills, or specialized training that you have undertaken.

5. Extracurricular Activities

Providing details of any leadership roles, volunteer work, or extracurricular involvements can offer insight into your character and interests outside formal work or study.

6. References

While optional, adding references at the end of your brag sheet can add credibility and provide avenues for further consideration or confirmation of your abilities.

Creating a Personalized Brag Sheet

Mimicking a brag sheet example can help you structure your own document, but personalization is key. Tailor your brag sheet to the specific opportunity you are applying for. Here are some tips:

* Focus on achievements most relevant to the application or position.

* Use action verbs to describe experiences and accomplishments.

* Quantify achievements with data and outcomes wherever possible.

* Keep the formatting clean and professional.

* Update your brag sheet regularly to include your latest achievements.

Real-World Brag Sheet Examples

To further illustrate the effectiveness of a well-constructed brag sheet, let's look at some real-world brag sheet examples:

* Academic Brag Sheet: Includes sections on coursework, GPA, academic awards, research projects, and relevant extracurricular activities.

* Professional Brag Sheet: Focuses heavily on work experience, skills, and certifications, with specific examples of problem-solving or leadership experiences.

* Personal Development Brag Sheet: Highlights personal growth achievements such as self-taught skills, community involvement, or personal projects.

These examples can serve as templates or inspiration for crafting your own brag sheet, helping to clearly present your unique qualifications and experiences.

Conclusion: Making the Most of a Brag Sheet Example

Understanding how to create and utilize a brag sheet effectively can greatly enhance your ability to present yourself to potential employers or educational institutions. By studying a brag sheet example and following the guidelines provided, you can craft an impactful document that accurately reflects your capabilities and accomplishments.

* Brag sheets are concise personal records of achievements and skills.

* Different settings require tailored versions of brag sheets.

* Constant updates ensure relevance and accuracy.

* They help quickly convey crucial information to decision-makers.

* External resources can complement your brag sheet efforts.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a brag sheet used for?

A brag sheet is used to outline and highlight an individual's achievements and skills. It is often used for job applications, scholarships, or other professional opportunities.

Can I use a brag sheet in place of a resume?

While a brag sheet contains some similar information to a resume, it is not a direct substitute. A resume is generally more formal and structured for job applications, whereas a brag sheet can be more personal and flexible.

How often should I update my brag sheet?

It is advisable to update your brag sheet regularly, especially after achieving new accomplishments or acquiring additional skills. Regular updates ensure all information remains current.

What should I include in a college application brag sheet?

For college applications, include academic achievements, relevant coursework, extracurricular activities, leadership roles, and any volunteer work to demonstrate a well-rounded profile.

Where can I find credible examples of brag sheets?

Credible examples of brag sheets can often be found through university career services, online educational resources, and professional career advice websites. External resources like Wikipedia's education section can also provide useful background information.
 
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  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:

    Marketing
    Psychology
    Econometrics
    Social work
    Nursing/Health Sciences
    Engineering
    Business/Management
    English/Literature/Creative Writing

    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.

    Regards
     more

  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:



    Marketing
    Psychology
    Econometrics
    Social work
    Nursing/Health Sciences
    Engineering
    Business/Management
    English/Literature/Creative Writing

    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.



    Regards
     more

  • Hey buddy, we have no idea what a mental crisis is and could not advise you without triggering some legal issues.

    For me, personally, a mental crisis... could mean what you envision that, what you want to happen vs what actually happens just don’t match. Thats just life and life has hic-ups which we create ourselves or its road blocks others place in our way? Each instant is a lesson. A preparation for a future plans. A career, job, investment opportunity is just an avenue to set you up for a lifestyle which you are looking to live.

    You step forward and if you fall, you fall forward. Yes, we scrape knees but that’s have the fun of it. Getting back up better than before helps us reach goals.

    Any issue you have had in the past, should be, in my opinion, kept private.
    That is unless it’s a serious issue which must be disclosed.

    Otherwise, move forward thinking only of your next steps, next interview , next conversation. It’s life. Love it & live it!

    Things will always fall forward as long as you keep getting up & over the hurdles. less
     more

1   
  • Hi there. How are you doing today. I just need a lil’ help connecting me to your school colleagues 🔴. I wanna assist them to crush their assignments... and get top grades ‘cause I’m solid in:



    Marketing
    Psychology
    Econometrics
    Social work
    Nursing/Health Sciences
    Engineering
    Business/Management
    English/Literature/Creative Writing

    You wanna hook me up with them so I can help ‘em soar with my assignment writing skills.



    Regards
     more

  • That’s a nice question to ask legal! Did the job requisition state: 5 years of experience, college degree or certificate, clean background and must... not have children? Hmmmm? You may not need a job now, but I’m not an attorney. more

  • Bring it to HR to address it! Try not to anticipate what clients might think! If it bothers you just report it.

  • Warmly suggest chewing cloves and name some benefits like vitamin C and other things. It helps with breath as well.

I Built an AI Agent That Applies to Jobs While I Sleep


Job hunting is a full-time job that pays nothing. You spend hours scrolling boards, tailoring resumes, writing cover letters, and filling out forms -- and 90% of it goes into a void. I decided to automate the entire pipeline.

I built an autonomous agent that runs 24/7 on a cron schedule. It discovers opportunities, researches companies, tailors resumes, writes cover letters, submits applications,... and tracks follow-ups. Here's how it works and what I learned building it.

The system has three layers:

Everything runs through a SQLite database that tracks every opportunity through a pipeline: .

The agent has 40+ "skills" -- modular instruction sets that tell it how to handle specific tasks. Each skill is a markdown file with a defined interface:

Skills are loaded contextually. A scan session only loads discovery skills. A conversion session only loads resume + submission skills. This prevents context pollution -- a key lesson I learned the hard way.

LLMs will fabricate impressive-sounding experience if you let them. My solution: a file that locks every claim:

The resume builder can reorganize, emphasize, and reframe -- but it can NEVER fabricate companies, metrics, or skills not in this file. A programmatic validator checks every generated resume against the facts before submission.

This single constraint eliminated the "impressive but fictional" resume problem.

If you submit 20 applications with the same cover letter structure, recruiters notice. Template DNA kills response rates.

I define 5 narrative variants -- different "story spines" for the same experience:

Each application draws from a different variant. The DB tracks which one was used so they never repeat within a batch.

The hardest part isn't writing applications -- it's submitting them. Every ATS (Greenhouse, Lever, Ashby, Workable, iCIMS) has different forms, different required fields, different upload workflows.

I use browser-use -- an LLM-driven browser automation library. Instead of writing brittle Playwright selectors for each ATS, I describe the task in natural language:

This handles 80% of ATS portals without custom code. When it fails, I fall back to targeted Playwright scripts for specific platforms.

1. Discovery is cheap, conversion is expensive.

My first version had 8 discovery cron jobs and 0 conversion jobs. It found 400+ opportunities and submitted 0 applications. The ratio should be inverted -- spend 20% of agent time discovering and 80% converting.

2. 70% of aggregator listings are stale.

Job boards serve cached listings that are already closed. I built a URL verification step that checks if the apply link is still live before building a packet. This saved hours of work on dead opportunities.

3. Context discipline matters.

Loading 40 tools into an LLM context degrades everything. Research shows performance drops significantly beyond 5-10 tools per session. Each cron job now loads ONLY the skills it needs.

4. ATS keyword matching is the first gate.

Before submitting, I run each resume through an ATS scoring check: keyword overlap with the JD, section heading compliance, format validation. If the score is below 70%, the resume gets rewritten before submission.

5. Follow-ups are where responses come from.

Cold applications have a 0.5-2% response rate. A well-timed follow-up at day 7 can 3-4x that. The agent schedules follow-ups automatically and drafts personalized messages that reference something current (recent company news, product launch, etc).

The agent runs on a $0/month infrastructure stack: SQLite for the database, cron for scheduling, free-tier API keys for job sources, and commodity LLM calls for generation.

If you're applying to more than 5 jobs per week, yes. The ROI is immediate. The first version took me a weekend to build, and it's saved dozens of hours since.

Start simple: a script that scans one job board, scores fit against your resume, and generates a tailored cover letter. Add submission automation later. Add follow-up tracking after that.

The full pipeline is ~2,000 lines of meaningful Python. Most of it is plumbing (API calls, database operations, file management). The actual intelligence is in the prompts -- which is why the skill system works. You iterate on the prompts, not the code.
 
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I Applied to 47 Jobs in Six Weeks and Lost Track of All of Them


At some point around application number 23, I stopped knowing what I'd applied to.

Not vaguely -- completely. I'd be scrolling Reed on a Tuesday evening and think "did I already send my CV to this one?" and have genuinely no idea. The job title looked familiar. The company name rang a bell. Or maybe I was confusing it with the one on Totaljobs that had a nearly identical description. I'd either... apply again and look like an idiot, or skip it and miss something decent.

This is the part of job searching nobody warns you about. Everyone talks about CVs, cover letters, interview technique. Nobody mentions that once you're applying to 10+ roles a week, the whole thing becomes an organisational nightmare.

You forget what you applied to. Obvious, but worth stating. After a few weeks of firing off applications across Indeed UK, Reed, Totaljobs, LinkedIn, and direct company websites, you have no coherent picture of what's out there waiting.

You miss follow-up windows. Most job ads in the UK go quiet for two weeks, then either ghost you or send an automated rejection. But some recruiters -- particularly agencies -- respond faster and expect you to be on it. If you applied 12 days ago and haven't heard back, is that normal silence or a conversation you should have nudged? You won't remember without notes.

You can't spot patterns. If you're getting interviews but no offers, you need to know that. If you're not even getting to interview stage, you need to know that too. None of this is visible when your "tracker" is a vague feeling and three browser tabs.

Universal Credit makes it paperwork. If you're claiming UC, you already know about the 28-day work search requirement -- the expectation that you're recording your job-seeking activity in your journal. That means dates, company names, what you applied for. Doing this from memory after the fact is exactly as grim as it sounds.

A spreadsheet. Obviously. Column A: company. Column B: role. Column C: date. Column D: status.

It lasted about a week before I stopped updating it, then stopped opening it, then forgot where I'd saved it. The problem with a blank spreadsheet is that it has no structure -- you have to decide what to track, build the format yourself, and then maintain the discipline to keep it going when you're already exhausted from job searching.

I also tried a notes app, which was worse. And I briefly had a system involving starred emails that I don't want to talk about.

I ended up using UK Job Tracker Pro, which is free, runs entirely in your browser, and doesn't ask you to create an account. That last part matters more than it sounds -- I wasn't going to sign up for another platform, hand over my email, and start getting marketing at me while I was already stressed.

The structure it gives you is the useful bit. You log each application with the company, role, where you found it, the date, and current status. There's a notes field for anything specific -- the name of the recruiter who called, what salary was mentioned, whether the job ad said "must have" or "would be nice to have" on that particular skill. Stuff you'll definitely forget.

The status tracking is what fixed the follow-up problem for me. When you can see that something's been sitting at "Applied" for three weeks, you know it's either dead or worth a nudge. When you can see you've got two interviews in the same week, you can actually prepare properly rather than scrambling.

It stores everything locally -- nothing goes anywhere, no server, no account. Which also means if you're being careful about where your data lives, you don't have to think about it.

It won't get you a job. I want to be honest about that because it's easy to mistake organising your job search for doing your job search.

A beautifully maintained tracker with 50 logged applications and no tailored CVs, no prep, no follow-through is just tidy failure. The tracker is scaffolding -- it holds the chaos in place so you can actually focus on the work that matters.

But removing avoidable chaos is worth doing. Forgetting you applied somewhere, missing a follow-up because you lost track of the date, not being able to answer "how many roles have you applied for this week" on your UC journal -- none of that is helping you. It's just noise on top of an already difficult process.

If you're in the middle of a serious job search right now, give it a try: https://genesisclawbot.github.io/job-tracker/. No signup, no faff, works offline. Log your next five applications and see if it changes how you think about what you're doing.

It probably won't feel like much at first. That's fine. The point is that six weeks in, you'll actually know where you stand.
 
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2026 DPPF Sports Photography Grants


The DPPF Sports Photography Grants, organised by the Doug Pensinger Photography Fund, are designed to support emerging and early-career sports photographers who are building professional careers in sports photography. The program provides financial support, industry recognition, and professional exposure to talented photographers who demonstrate strong visual storytelling through sports imagery.... Applicants submit a curated portfolio of 20 sports photographs along with a résumé and professional biography, allowing the judging panel to evaluate both the photographer's creative ability and their career trajectory within the field of sports photojournalism.

The grant program focuses specifically on photographers who are still at the beginning stages of their careers, particularly those with limited paid professional experience in sports photography. Submissions must consist entirely of original work owned by the applicant, and entries must adhere to strict ethical and editorial standards consistent with professional photojournalism practices. Images must represent authentic sports moments without significant digital manipulation, and the use of AI-generated or heavily altered images is prohibited. These guidelines ensure that the competition highlights genuine photographic skill, ethical storytelling, and integrity in sports photography.

Beyond financial assistance, the DPPF Sports Photography Grants also aim to create long-term opportunities for professional development and mentorship within the global sports photography community. Selected photographers gain visibility among industry professionals, editors, and established sports photographers who serve as judges and mentors. Through the grant program and its associated events, the fund helps emerging sports photographers develop their portfolios, expand professional networks, and advance their careers in the competitive world of sports photography and visual journalism.

There is no entry fee.

Open worldwide to emerging or early-career sports photographers with no more than three years of cumulative paid professional sports photography experience.

Seven photographers receive $5,000 grants intended for career development along with an expenses-paid trip to the 2026 DPPF Sports Photography Gathering, an event providing portfolio reviews, professional networking, and career guidance. Up to three of those seven primary grant winners may also receive a year-long mentorship with leading industry professionals from the DPPF Advisory Board, while up to three additional applicants may be awarded Development Grants of $2,500 and the same gathering trip. Grant funds must be used for professional development purposes such as equipment, education, workshops, or travel related to photography careers, and winners must provide receipts documenting the use of funds.
 
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Book Resumes Hosted by the VERSO ILS SaaS Library Catalog Management Solution | Weekly Voice


This partnership enables Soutron Global's LMS VERSO to support libraries in a concrete, meaningful way by providing ready access to a database that details each title's significant educational value"

-- Brad Flasher, CEO of Soutron Global

SAN DIEGO, CA, UNITED STATES, March 12, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Soutron Global, an internationally recognized SaaS provider of information management,... resource sharing, and digital preservation solutions for archives, libraries, and museums, today announced their support of the Unite Against Book Bans Book Résumés initiative, in conjunction with the American Library Association (ALA). Soutron Global is hosting the Book Resumes catalog collection using their SaaS-based VERSO ILS. VERSO will be used to catalog the Book Resume collection, which can be accessed here: https://bookresume.agverso.com/home?cid=bookresume&lid=bookresume

Book Résumés Support Collection Development:

Book Résumés are designed to support collection development, reader advisory, and informed decision-making. They provide librarians with concise, factual descriptions that can be integrated into catalogs or accessed independently. Initially available in PDF format, a book résumé PDF contains synopsis, reviews, awards, accolades, and links to resources and relevant media - resources that professionally trained librarians and educators use when they select books.

Collaborative Initiative Backed by ALA, ARSL, COSLA, CALA, DPLA, and Major Publishers:

In addition to Auto-Graphics and the American Library Association (ALA), other companies involved in this initiative includes the Association for Rural & Small Libraries (ARSL), the Chief Officers of State Library Agencies (COSLA), the Chinese American Librarians Association (CALA), the Digital Public Library of America (DPLA), along with Soutron Global clients HarperCollins Publishers and Penguin Random House (UK), in addition to nearly 300 other leading library, author, and book publishing organizations.

Dedicated VERSO Database Makes Book Résumés Searchable, Filterable, and Copy‑Catalog Ready:

Now, with support from Auto-Graphics, a Soutron Global company which provides a variety of SaaS solutions for public libraries, a dedicated VERSO ILS database will host the PDF's directly, linking each PDF résumé to its corresponding MARC record, making the banned book resumes fully searchable and filterable through a live library catalog interface. Libraries will be able to Copy Catalog banned book titles into their collections, as part of their mission to improve access to titles that promote intellectual freedom.

MARC Record Integration Enhances Discoverability and Cataloging Flexibility:

Adding the MARC record to the Book Resume has several advantages for libraries, helping them to provide better services to teachers, parents, and community members, teachers, and parents, to provide enhanced discoverability through catalog search, facets, and filters, providing copy cataloging and record enhancement functionality.

VERSO ILS Offers Z39.50 and API Support for Seamless System Interoperability:

The VERSO ILS supports PDF attachments and Z-target exposure, which offer libraries better integration potential via existing Z39.50 targets or API endpoints to pull Book Résumé MARC records into their own systems. The library may merge or overlay the Book Résumé record with an existing bibliographic record. Local holdings, item records, and local cataloging practices are preserved according to local merge rules.

Libraries Can Enrich Existing Bibliographic Records or Link Directly to the Public Catalog:

This approach allows libraries to enrich existing records with Book Résumé content without replacing core bibliographic data. Libraries that prefer not to integrate MARC records may instead link directly to the Book Résumé public catalog from their website, guides, or internal resources. This option provides immediate access to Book Résumé content with no local system configuration required. Libraries may choose the approach that best fits their technical capacity and workflows -- either deep catalog integration via Z39.50 or simple linking for rapid access.

Soutron Global Reinforces Commitment to Intellectual Freedom:

"This partnership enables Soutron Global's LMS VERSO to support libraries in a concrete, meaningful way by providing ready access to a database that details each title's significant educational value," states Brad Flasher, CEO of Soutron Global. "We are happy to have the opportunity to reinforce our commitment to the library community and support intellectual freedom."

Access the VERSO Book Resumes Catalog here: https://bookresume.agverso.com/home?cid=bookresume&lid=bookresume

Learn more about the Book Résumé initiative: https://bookresumes.uniteagainstbookbans.org/

Learn more about Soutron Global and Auto-Graphic's VERSO ILS software: https://www.soutron.com/en_us/products/auto-graphics-verso-integrated-library-system/

About Soutron Global

Soutron Global is a leading provider of SaaS information management, resource sharing and digital preservation solutions for archives, knowledge hubs, libraries and museums. Partnering with archivists, librarians, collection managers and knowledge management workers at corporations, museums, education and government institutions worldwide, Soutron Global empowers organizations to transform how they organize, preserve, share and access their collection assets. Our SaaS solutions are content agnostic, easily handling library holdings, proprietary knowledge, cultural artifacts and archival assets, print, digital and physical. With a proven track record spanning over 5 decades, Soutron Global companies are recognized for their innovative software solutions created by embracing client challenges and partnering with them to develop new solutions.

Elizabeth Kelley

Soutron Global

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From Tab Chaos to Clarity: Building an AI-Powered Job Application Tracker


The Problem That Made Me Build This

Job hunting is exhausting, you spent hours searching for jobs, open 10+ tabs and hit apply to the jobs you think good for you, but then you come back the other day and don't even know where you applied.

Then you suddenly got an email that you are shortlisted (sometimes fraud) and you sit to recall when and where I applied for this job, don't have any idea... about the job description, type, location or anything.

Sometimes you miss opportunities just because you didn't opened that particular one platform out of 15,

I was hanging in the same loop every day, every week.

I tried everything spreadsheets, online tool and many more (even the txt file at first) so then I realized I have to bring my dev instincts back, and I really built something useful that I use daily, JobFlow AI.

🛡️ What is JobFlow AI

JobFlow AI is like your relatives who keep eyes on everything you do using their connections (As jobFlow has it's Groq powered extension with multiple features) basically, it watches your job hunt so you don't have to.

It's a tool where you can save your jobs instantly keeping there records, from company name, role to the status and many more (Even the posted jobs URL).

It has an Extension that has AI features like,

* AI Match Score that compares your resume to the job description by just one click.

* Auto Scrapping that scraps all the details about the jobs by one click so we don't manually have to write everything.

* Cold email based on the Job role and your resume it generates a personalized cold email, so just copy and send it to the Founder, HR...

🔨 Building the Chrome Extension (the hardest part)

First of all why do I have to make an extension? Going to the main site every time I want to save a job and saving it manually is equals to writing them in a txt file, boring and time consuming, you might choose to not track the jobs over adding everything manually, so I needed to find a way so it can be a one click tool and actually time saving.

Then the easiest way to perform operations being on another site is extension just open click and save EASYYY.

well not that easy, it was the most difficult part of the entire project for me.

It has multiple features like AI Match Score, Auto Scrap and Cold email generator,

but the most difficult to build was AUTO SCRAPP.

Auto Scrap:

The feature scraps all the important information like job title, role, type, location and every important info so we don't have to type manually.

I looked at APIs like Jsearch and Serpapi but they either cost money, had rate limits, or returned garbage data I'd still have to clean. So I thought -- why not just scrape it directly from the page the user is already on?

And decided to create everything from scratch,

so the question was how will I even make it? the first approach was using

* 1. CSS Selectors and DOM and it worked 😀, (Just for linkedin 😐). the problem was these selectors varies from site to site different on different platforms.

* 2. AI sending the entire page to AI can give you accurate information but it's not an efficient as it also sends some garbage and non essential stuff with your JD and it might mess with the token limit of the AI.

* SO I had to choose something, I Decided to go with the hybrid approach. CSS Selectors + AI that made it possible to work on any platforms. It sends just the header and description from the page (CSS Scrapping), so It doesn't scrap each field like #job-title (Nah bad Idea). It just sends header and description to AI, Thus no garbage just pure information that gives AI less data but important information so the AI can give accurate responses. And that's how I got 95%+ accuracy in scrapping jobs ;)

Now there are 2 frontend and one backend, so if user login to the main site the extension has no clue. So should I create a 2 different sign in system for both? or should I store the token in the local Storage? Both sounds terrible, because local Storage doesn't provide any security so javascript can easily get the information about the token, and that's not a user will expect. SO what can help? Cookies ,cookies aren't allowed to get via javascript and solves the problem and provide shared session using sameSite: none and secure: true. so we don't have to login to twice, just login once in main and the extension will get the token from cookies. So Login to JobFlow -> use the extension

AI isn't only to help the extension scrap the job details, it's also to give feedback, compares your resume (Resume will be uploaded in the main site after signing in just once but you can always update it 😏), and also generate cold emails for you.

There are several AIs available but why Groq? I was going for GEMINI but to be honest (it was not that good as I thought sadly), the responses are very good but the only problems comes is speed, request per day or token (it's slow and less tokens as well).

That's why I had to choose something that can be actually fast (not waiting 1 minute just to see if my resume matches or not).

And then how can I forget Groq, I have already used it and already impressed about how fast it was and how good the responses were.

Here are the few things that I considered while using GROQ:

* Model I used llama-3.3-70b-versatile that is a free, fast and gives around 30 request per minute.

* Response return type must be JSON to get the correct data, if I get any other text format then it might break the AI analysis. so I forced it only to send the JSON data.

* Temperature that sets the structure more consistent and not too creative.

* Prompt : and how can I forget writing a clear prompt so the AI can return something useful not garbage.

And that's how I was able to use AI to create important features that actually helps job hunting easy not just creating a simple CRUD app.

Now it gives feel good Scores from 0-100.

🛠️ Tech Stack

* Frontend: React.js, Tailwind CSS, Context API, Vite, Lucide React

* Backend: Nodejs, ExpressJs, MongoDB(Mongoose)

* AI Engine: Groq API (Llama 3-70B), Prompt Engineering

* Extension: Manifest V3, Chrome Scripting API, Shadow DOM

* Deployement: Render (Backend), Vercel (Frontend)

🚀 Try it out!

That's JobFlow AI -- built out of frustration at 2am, used daily, and finally documented 😄

The extension isn't on the Chrome Web Store yet, but you can:

📹 Watch the full demo above

⭐ Star the repo and follow the README to run it locally

🤝 Contribute if you want to help get it on the Web Store!

🔗 Links:

🌐 Live Demo → https://job-flow-ai-three.vercel.app/

💻 GitHub → https://github.com/Aryan-404-404/JobFlow-AI

If you're currently managing 15 tabs of job applications and a prayer -- I built this for you. 🫡

Drop a comment below 👇 what feature would YOU want next? Cover letter generator? Auto-apply?

Happy Coding 🙂
 
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The end of resumé? How hiring is changing in the AI era


Every fresher's first aim before graduating college is to have a perfect resumé which will help them land their dream job.

In this competitive world, even veterans also look to constantly update their resumés as frequently as possible.

But wait! Is that sheet of paper still going to remain relevant in the near future?

With the advent of AI, one well formatted CV is not enough to decide... employability.

A 2023 study found that more than 70 per cent of respondents believe skills-based hiring is more effective than relying on résumés alone, according to a report by TestGorilla.

Yet despite constant predictions about its demise, the traditional CV continues to dominate recruitment.

Matt Craven, a CV and résumé expert, said in a recent LinkedIn post: "I might be somewhat biased, but I don't think the CV is becoming obsolete anytime soon."

"For more than twenty years, people have been predicting its demise," Craven wrote. "Every few years a new idea appears such as career passports, blockchain credentials, video CVs, and application platforms designed to replace the CV."

Yet the CV remains the universal currency of the job market, largely because the entire recruitment ecosystem is built around it.

Recruitment processes, recruiter behaviour, and HR systems all rely on the CV. Candidates apply with it, recruiters review it, hiring managers request it, and agencies send it to clients. HR platforms also store and parse CV data.

Even professional networking platforms like LinkedIn function largely as digital versions of a résumé.

Removing the CV would require rebuilding the entire hiring infrastructure, from HR systems and recruiter habits to candidate behaviour. This would require employers across the world to adopt a new system simultaneously.

"What does need to change," Craven added, "is how CVs are written."

The rise of artificial intelligence has complicated the recruitment process.

Anyone can now generate a buzzword-heavy resumé or cover letter within seconds using AI tools, polish profile photos, or even manipulate coding tests.

According to Business Insider, fake or exaggerated applications are becoming harder to distinguish from genuine candidates.

As a result, many hiring managers are shifting their focus toward skills, enthusiasm, and demonstrable ability, with some companies even removing résumé requirements altogether.

Dmitry Zaytsev, founder of Dandelion Civilization, told Gulf News that CVs are becoming less influential in hiring decisions.

"CVs are still relevant, but mostly as an administrative document rather than a hiring signal. They help confirm basic facts and provide a timeline, but they are a weak predictor of performance," he said.

Some organisations are experimenting with entirely new recruitment methods.

Ireland's public service broadcaster RTÉ, for example, screens young professionals using creative skill-based questions, tasks, and multiple-choice assessments rather than traditional CV submissions.

Applicants are required to complete a structured form and cannot upload or copy-paste a re vhyfsumé.

RTÉ is not alone. Many companies are experimenting with task-based applications, portfolio reviews, and practical tests to evaluate candidates.

The shift reflects a broader question. Can a single sheet of paper truly capture a person's potential?

Personality traits, teamwork, communication skills, adaptability, and enthusiasm often play a significant role in determining workplace success.

New hiring formats are also becoming more common.

A language coach on LinkedIn shared an anecdote about receiving a hiring link where she had to respond to interview questions on video.

"At first it felt strange and I didn't want to go ahead," she wrote. "But now I understand why companies are doing it, although I am still anxious about video interviews."

Many companies now include customised application forms, recorded video responses, and live assessments as part of their hiring process.

Meanwhile, candidates themselves are becoming more creative in presenting their work.

Digital CVs, video introductions, GitHub portfolios, and professional platforms like Muck Rack are increasingly being used alongside or sometimes instead of traditional resumés.

While experts remain divided on whether the CV will disappear entirely, most agree that its role in recruitment is evolving.

For now, the resumé may still open doors, but proving one's skills increasingly happens beyond the page.

The CV may remain part of the hiring process for years to come. But in a skills-driven job market, it is no longer the only story employers want to read.
 
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