Create Standout Job Applications
That Land Interviews
From ATS-optimized resumes to compelling cover letters, our intelligent prompt generator helps you create professional job application materials that showcase your unique value and get noticed by recruiters.
21,500+ prompts generated
8+ document types
10+ industries
4.9/5 from 2,150+ job seekers
How to get better resume and cover letter prompts without sounding generic
A weak job-application prompt usually produces weak job-application copy. If the AI only gets a job title and a vague instruction to “make it professional,” the result often sounds broad, repetitive, and forgettable. A stronger prompt gives the model the target role, experience level, industry context, achievements, and tone so the final draft feels more tailored to the real opportunity.
Lead with relevance
The best resume and cover letter prompts stay close to the actual role. Mention the industry, job function, seniority, and the kinds of problems you solve so the output highlights experience that matters.
Use real achievements
Specific numbers, outcomes, and responsibilities make AI-generated drafts much stronger. Metrics like revenue growth, cost savings, process improvements, or team leadership instantly make the content more credible.
Match the employer tone
A startup application, a formal corporate role, and a creative portfolio job do not all need the same voice. Telling the AI how polished, confident, concise, or personable the writing should feel makes a big difference.
What to include in a stronger career prompt
- Target role: define the job title or position you are applying for.
- Experience level: mention whether you are entry-level, mid-career, senior, changing industries, or returning to work.
- Key achievements: include results, metrics, projects, promotions, or certifications that should stand out.
- Important keywords: add tools, responsibilities, or role-specific terms from the job description when relevant.
- Document goal: tell the AI whether you need a resume summary, bullet points, a tailored cover letter, or a concise professional profile.
Quick answers before you generate
What makes a resume prompt more effective?
A better resume prompt includes the role, industry, career level, standout achievements, and the type of positioning you want. That helps the AI produce bullet points and summaries that feel more targeted instead of generic.
Can I use this for cover letters as well as resumes?
Yes. The same prompt framework can help with resumes, tailored cover letters, LinkedIn summaries, follow-up notes, and other job-search content where clarity and relevance matter.
Should I include ATS keywords in the prompt?
Yes, especially if you have the job description. Including the right keywords, tools, and responsibilities gives the AI a better chance of producing content that aligns with recruiter expectations and ATS filters.
Examples you can copy and tweak
Resume summary prompt
Good for building a sharper top section that quickly explains your value.
Write a resume summary for a mid-level digital marketing manager applying to a SaaS company. Highlight experience in paid acquisition, lifecycle campaigns, analytics, and cross-functional collaboration. Keep the tone polished and confident, and make the summary feel ATS-friendly without sounding stuffed with keywords.
Achievement bullet prompt
Useful when your experience is real but needs stronger phrasing and structure.
Turn my work history into achievement-focused resume bullets for an operations coordinator role. Emphasize process improvements, vendor coordination, reporting accuracy, and time savings. Use action verbs, measurable outcomes where possible, and clean professional phrasing.
Tailored cover letter prompt
Helpful when you want a letter that feels specific to the role rather than copied from a template.
Write a tailored cover letter for a customer success specialist application at a B2B software company. Mention experience with onboarding, client retention, account communication, and solving support issues. Keep the tone warm, credible, and concise, with a strong final paragraph that shows genuine interest in the role.
Common mistakes that make AI-generated job materials feel weak
- Using a broad prompt with no target role, which leads to bland language and weak positioning.
- Leaving out measurable achievements, so the output sounds generic even if your background is strong.
- Ignoring the job description, which makes it harder for the draft to align with ATS keywords and employer expectations.
- Making the tone too formal or too vague, especially in cover letters where real personality still matters.
- Submitting AI-generated copy without editing for accuracy, specificity, and your actual voice.
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