How-to
Is it OK to use AI to write your resume?
Yes, it is OK — recruiters use AI too, and no serious employer bans AI-assisted resumes. What gets candidates rejected is not AI itself. It is what careless AI use produces: invented metrics, buzzword soup, and claims that collapse under one interview question.
Recruiters do not reject resumes for being AI-assisted. They reject resumes that read like everyone else’s — "results-driven professional", "spearheaded cross-functional initiatives" — and resumes whose claims fall apart when probed. Both are symptoms of handing a chatbot the keys instead of using it as an editor.
Where AI genuinely helps: rephrasing weak bullets to lead with a strong verb, matching your wording to the job description’s vocabulary, cutting filler, and keeping formatting consistent. These are editing tasks, and AI is a good editor.
Where it backfires: asking an open-ended chatbot to "improve my resume" invites it to add a metric you never measured, a tool you never used, or a certification you never earned. The AI does not carry that risk into the interview or the background check — you do.
The sameness problem is real. Recruiters read hundreds of resumes a week, and default ChatGPT output has a recognizable cadence: uniform bullet lengths, the same twenty verbs, round numbers on every line. Blending in is the opposite of what a resume is for.
The rule that makes AI safe: use it in a way that is constrained by your real experience. Feed it your actual bullets and your actual numbers, and reject any suggestion that introduces a fact you did not supply. If a tool adds a metric you never gave it, that is not a rewrite — it is a fabrication with your name on it.