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Should You Use AI to Write Your Resume?
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ChatGPT can write a resume in 30 seconds. So should you let it?
The honest answer: it depends on how you use it.
Where AI Shines
Getting Past the Blank Page
The hardest part of writing a resume is starting. AI is great at generating a first draft you can work from. Give it your job history, the target role, and let it produce a skeleton.
Improving Bullet Points
AI is excellent at taking a weak bullet point and making it stronger:
- Your input: "Worked on the backend"
- AI output: "Developed and maintained RESTful APIs serving 50K+ daily requests using Node.js and PostgreSQL"
That second version is better in every way. But notice: the specifics (50K requests, Node.js, PostgreSQL) had to come from you.
Keyword Optimization
AI can cross-reference a job description with your resume and suggest missing keywords. This is genuinely useful for ATS optimization.
Where AI Falls Short
Generic, Soulless Content
AI-generated resumes tend to sound... the same. If every candidate is using ChatGPT with the same prompts, every resume reads identically. Recruiters notice.
Common AI tells:
- "Results-driven professional with a proven track record"
- "Leveraged cutting-edge technologies to drive innovation"
- "Passionate about delivering exceptional results"
If your resume sounds like a LinkedIn motivational post, it's too AI.
Fabricated Specifics
AI will happily invent numbers and achievements that sound plausible but aren't real. "Increased revenue by 47%" — did you though? Making up metrics is a fast track to getting caught in an interview.
Missing Your Voice
Your resume should sound like a competent, articulate version of you — not like a robot that swallowed a thesaurus. The best resumes have personality. AI tends to sand that away.
The Smart Approach
Here's how to use AI as a tool without letting it take the wheel:
- Write the first draft yourself — even if it's rough, it's authentic
- Use AI to polish — ask it to strengthen specific bullets, not rewrite everything
- Always fact-check — every number, every claim should be something you can defend in an interview
- Read it out loud — if it doesn't sound like something you'd say, rewrite it
- Use AI for ATS optimization — let it check for keyword gaps, not rewrite your story
The Integrity Factor
Some companies are starting to test for AI-generated application materials. If your resume says one thing and you can't articulate it in the interview, that's a red flag.
The goal isn't to have AI write your resume. It's to use AI to make your resume better.
JobSlayer AI takes a different approach — we don't write your resume for you. We score it and show you exactly what to fix, so the end result is authentically yours.