Job-specific cover letters without the existential dread
68% of hiring managers still expect a cover letter (ResumeLab), but writing a unique one for each of 100+ applications is soul-crushing. Paste the job description and your resume — get a personalized, non-generic cover letter that actually sounds like a human wrote it.
Write a cover letter for this job. Use my resume to find the strongest connections between my experience and their requirements. The tone should be professional but human — no corporate clichés, no "I am excited to apply" openers, no AI-sounding filler. Open with something specific about the company or role. In the body, connect 2-3 of my most relevant accomplishments to their stated needs. Close with a clear next step. Keep it under 400 words. If I include notes, weave them in naturally. Job description: [paste the job description here] My resume: [paste your resume here] Notes (optional): [any additional context]
This skill reads the job description and your resume, finds the intersection
of what they need and what you've done, and writes a cover letter that
connects those dots. No "I am writing to express my enthusiastic interest"
filler. No AI slop. Just a clear case for why you're a fit.
Turn "did stuff" into "delivered $2.4M in pipeline revenue"
Recruiters spend 7 seconds on a resume (Ladders). Vague duties get skimmed. Quantified achievements get interviews. This skill takes your job duties and accomplishments and rewrites them with specific numbers, percentages, and business impact — even when you don't think your work is measurable.
Apply smarter, not just more
Mass-applying with the same resume gets mass-rejected. This skill builds a tracking system, tailored resume modules, cover letter templates, and weekly quotas so you stay consistent without burning out.
Turn every "no" into usable data for your next "yes"
Turn rejection patterns into useful signal so you can adjust your search instead of guessing.
Wikipedia-grade AI pattern removal
Comprehensive AI writing cleanup based on Wikipedia's WikiProject AI Cleanup guidelines. Catches 24+ distinct patterns including inflated symbolism, em dash overuse, rule of three, copula avoidance, and sycophantic tone.