Turn job responsibilities into ATS-beating resume bullets with strong action verbs and measurable outcomes.
Use toolATS optimised
Uses action verbs and keyword structures that score well in Applicant Tracking Systems.
Outcome-first format
Every bullet leads with results, not tasks — the format that impresses hiring managers.
Seconds per bullet
Enter your responsibilities and get polished, interview-ready bullets instantly.
Role-specific language
Output adapts to your industry and seniority level, not a generic one-size-fits-all template.
Describe what you did in plain language — no need for perfect wording or polished prose.
Share the role you're applying for so the language matches the right seniority and industry.
Claude rewrites your experience using strong action verbs, quantified outcomes, and ATS-friendly structure.
Job seekers updating their CV
Transform a list of duties into compelling achievements that make hiring managers take notice.
Career changers
Reframe your experience to emphasise the most relevant skills for a new role or industry.
Recent graduates
Make limited experience sound substantial by framing internships and projects as outcomes.
Senior professionals
Articulate strategic impact and leadership at the right level for executive roles.
The best bullets lead with a strong action verb, include a quantified result, and stay under two lines. Example: 'Reduced customer churn by 18% by redesigning the onboarding flow for 50,000+ users.'
Enter what you know — the tool will suggest ways to estimate or frame impact even without hard numbers.
3–5 bullets per role is typical. Focus on achievements rather than a complete list of responsibilities.
Yes. The tool adapts to tech, finance, healthcare, marketing, design, operations, and more.
Yes. The bullets work equally well for LinkedIn experience entries and traditional resumes.
How to Write Resume Bullet Points That Beat ATS Filters
ATS systems reject most resumes before a human ever sees them. Here's how to write bullet points that pass the filter and still impress the recruiter.
Resume Bullets That Get Interviews vs the Ones That Don't
The difference between a resume that gets callbacks and one that doesn't often comes down to how individual bullets are written. Here's what separates them.
Strong Action Verbs for Resume Bullets (By Role and Industry)
Starting every bullet with 'responsible for' or 'worked on' signals low effort. Here are better action verbs organized by what they communicate and where they fit.