Applied skills
Checks whether skills are supported by projects, internships, labs, research, volunteering, or other real work.
For first jobs and campus opportunities
Projects, internships, coursework, volunteering, competitions, and practical work can prove capability—but only when the resume explains what you built, how you contributed, and what changed.
Upload your PDF to evaluate project evidence, skills credibility, ATS readability, role direction, and interview potential.
Example map
Your PDF receives its own scores
Visual diagnosis
Without a long employment history, the radar puts more pressure on clear projects, applied skills, readable structure, credible claims, and a coherent target role.
Checks whether skills are supported by projects, internships, labs, research, volunteering, or other real work.
Looks for what you personally designed, analyzed, built, tested, improved, or delivered in team projects.
Reviews whether the resume supports a clear job family instead of presenting every subject and technology equally.
Issues to check
From diagnosis to outcome
Label projects, internships, freelance work, and coursework accurately. Strong presentation should make genuine work clearer, not turn it into invented professional experience.
After the free scan, the optional rewrite can apply the remaining fixes and generate a cleaner PDF for placements and entry-level applications.
Use relevant projects, internships, research, volunteering, competitions, coursework, and practical achievements—described truthfully.
A focused one-page resume often works well when it can contain the relevant evidence clearly, but content quality matters more than an absolute page rule.
Prioritize certificates relevant to the target role and support them with projects or applied evidence when possible.