Your Resume Isn't Bad. It's Invisible.
Most applications never reach a human. Here's why — and how to fix it.
Here's something nobody in career advice wants to say out loud:
Your resume probably isn't bad. It's just invisible.
Not to humans — to software. And that software decides whether a human ever sees your name.
The Resume You Wrote Is Not the Resume Being Read
When you apply for a job online, your resume doesn't land in a recruiter's inbox. It gets parsed by an Applicant Tracking System — software that strips out your formatting, extracts your data into fields, and scores you against the job description before any person is involved.
The system doesn't read. It matches. Keywords, titles, dates, section names.
If your resume doesn't speak its language, your score drops below the cutoff and you never exist.
This is why you can be genuinely qualified for a role and still hear nothing.
What the Software Is Actually Looking For
The ATS compares your resume against the job description word by word. It's looking for:
Exact keyword matches — not synonyms, not paraphrases. If the posting says "stakeholder management" and your resume says "client relationships," that's a miss. Same concept, zero match.
Your job title — if theirs says "Senior Software Engineer" and yours says "Lead Engineer," the system may not connect them. Copy their exact title into your headline when it honestly applies to your role.
Standard section names — "Where I've Worked" is creative. "Work Experience" is what the parser expects. Use the boring version.
Dates in a readable format — Month Year to Month Year. "Jan '22–present" breaks most parsers.
The Rewrite That Actually Moves the Needle
Most resume advice tells you to "tailor your resume." What that actually means:
Take this bullet:
Managed cross-functional projects and improved team delivery timelines
And turn it into this:
Led cross-functional delivery of 3 product releases using agile methodology, reducing average sprint cycle by 2 weeks and improving on-time delivery from 61% to 89%
The second version has the keywords the ATS is scanning for. It has metrics that both the software and the human reviewer respond to. It's the same experience described in the language that gets you past the filter.
This is the work. Not a 10-step checklist — just doing this for every bullet, for every application.
The Real Problem with Manual Tailoring
It takes 45–60 minutes per application if you're doing it properly. For most active job seekers applying to 15–20 roles, that's a part-time job on top of everything else.
Rezumi was built specifically for this. Paste the job description, and the AI rewrites your bullets to match the keywords, shows you your ATS score, and flags what's missing — in under a minute. The output is yours to edit, not something you paste blindly.
Before Your Next Application
Run your current resume against the job description you're about to submit to. Count how many of the keywords in the posting actually appear in your resume — exact matches, not concepts. If it's fewer than 8, you're probably scoring below the cutoff.
That's the only number that matters before you hit send.