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CV / Resume Generator

Turn your background and a target role into an ATS-friendly resume draft in Markdown, ready to edit and polish.

The blank-page problem, solved

Staring at an empty resume is the worst part. You’ve got the experience. You just can’t figure out how to phrase six years of work into bullet points that don’t sound like a job description you copied off the company intranet.

Feed this generator your background and the role you’re chasing, and it drafts a structured resume in Markdown: a summary up top, a skills line, work history with achievement-style bullets, and an education block. The role you target actually shapes the output, so the same career history aimed at a data-analyst posting reads differently than one aimed at a project-manager one. Keywords shift, emphasis shifts, the summary reframes.

One thing up front: this hits an AI model on a server, not your browser. You type, it sends your text off, the model writes the draft, and it comes back. So it isn’t instant-offline, and it isn’t private in the local-only sense. Skip the salary figures and anything you’d rather not put through a third-party API.

Why Markdown, and why ATS-friendly

Applicant tracking systems choke on fancy layouts. Two-column templates, text boxes, icons, headshots, tables: the parser garbles them, and your nicely designed PDF turns into scrambled fields in the recruiter’s database. Plain structure survives that gauntlet.

Markdown gives you clean headings and bullets with zero layout trickery. Paste the output into a doc, into a resume builder, or straight into a text editor, and the bones are already there. You add the formatting that a human will see; the machine that screens you first still reads it fine.

How to use it

  1. Describe your background: past roles, years, notable wins, tools you know.
  2. Name the job you’re aiming for (title plus a line about the company helps a lot).
  3. Generate.
  4. Read the Markdown draft, then edit it hard.

That last step isn’t optional. Treat what comes back as a skeleton, not a finished resume.

Be honest about what this gives you

It’s a first draft. A good one, but a draft. The model fills in plausible phrasing, and sometimes that phrasing is vaguer than your real accomplishment or, worse, slightly inflates it. Your job is to swap generic bullets for the specific ones only you know.

Numbers are where you win. “Improved performance” means nothing. “Cut page load from 4.2s to 1.1s, lifting signups 18%” stops a recruiter mid-scroll. The generator can’t invent your metrics, so go back through every bullet and bolt real figures onto it.

Watch for stuff it guessed. If it claims a certification you don’t hold or a skill you’ve barely touched, cut it. You’re the one who has to defend this in an interview, not the model.

Want the matching application materials? The Cover Letter Generator pairs naturally with whatever resume you build here. Curious how recruiters phrase the role you’re targeting? The Job Description Generator shows you the language they use, which is handy for mirroring keywords.

Common questions

Is this a submit-ready resume?

No. It’s a starting draft meant to be edited. The structure and first-pass wording are done for you; the specifics, metrics, and final polish are on you before you send it anywhere.

Will it actually pass ATS scanners?

The Markdown structure is parser-friendly, which is the part most people get wrong. But ATS results also depend on matching keywords from the posting, so edit the draft to echo the language in the job ad.

Can I use it for a career change?

Yep. Describe your transferable experience and target the new field in the prompt. Expect to rewrite more bullets than usual, since reframing skills for a different industry is exactly the part a model handles loosely.

Does it write the cover letter too?

Not here. This builds the resume. For the letter, run the dedicated Cover Letter Generator and keep the two consistent.

What do I do with the Markdown after?

Paste it into Google Docs, Word, or any resume builder, then style it for human eyes. The headings and bullets convert cleanly, so you’re mostly adding fonts and spacing.

Is there a cost?

Free, no account. Generate as many versions as you want while you tune it for different roles.

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