Show HN: Resumine, a smart way to generate custom cover letters (resumine.io)
The workflow is simple yet efficient: 1. Copy and paste only once your professional background 2. Copy and paste a job description you would like to generate a cover letter to. 3. Select the theme 3.1. Professional and Formal 3.2. Creative and Innovative 3.3. Enthusiastic and Energetic
That's it, you get a tailored cover letter which is stored online and can be edited at any time.
We believe in a freemium approach, for which only users with extensive usage would become a customer.
It took us +6 months of work as dedicated to this as a side project. We are aware there are similar tools published in the last months, but we didn't want to give up because of this as we believe in competition.
We are glad to invite you all to try Resumine out and help us understand your thoughts and where can we focus to build a better service.
13 comments
[ 2.1 ms ] story [ 41.7 ms ] threadThe practice originated from when we printed out resumes and literally needed a sheet of paper to cover a resume for privacy purposes. In modern times I am never printing resumes; they are just a PDF on my computer.
So some are reading them at least, n=1 etc. I usually use them to supplement my CV, by pointing out things that are relevant for this specific position, or listing things that aren't on the CV (and usually shouldn't be on the CV) but still relevant, like a specific open source project I contributed to, or something from my personal life that relates.
Unless I can run it entirely locally, with no internet, that'll always be a hard pass from me.
We hate that idea too of reselling private data.
The concept of using a database is to simply improve user experience.
It's disrespectful because it's essentially a fake/empty message (often a regurgitation of the CV) and a bet that the receiving side will be dumb enough not to notice.
I occasinally use cover letters to highlight super specific things that called my attention or that make me a particularly well-suited candidate.
Really burned me up.
Just wonder if I'm doing the candidate a disservice, based on what I'm hearing.
That's the reason we designed a system that generates cover letters as personalized as possible. These are displayed in a rich text editor, as we encourage our users to use it as a skeleton and not as a final version.
The idea is to remix your current cover letter by using the company's description and job description to adapt it to the position that your are apply for. It's not perfect and you have to "clean up" some of the hallucinations but it does give you a big head start.