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Why your resume never reaches a human — and what actually fixes it
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Why your resume never reaches a human — and what actually fixes it

via Dev.toResuma

Over 90% of recruiters use Applicant Tracking Systems. That means before any human reads your resume, software parses it, scores it, and decides whether you move forward. Most people don't know this. And the ones who do often don't know what it actually means for how their resume should be written and formatted. Here's what ATS systems actually do: They strip your resume down to raw text and scan for keywords that match the job description. They're not reading for nuance — they're pattern matching. If your resume uses "led cross-functional initiatives" but the job description says "managed cross-functional teams," you may not score well even if the experience is identical. The exact phrase matters. They also parse structure. A two-column layout that looks clean in a PDF gets read left-to-right across both columns simultaneously by most parsers — mixing your job title with a skill from the adjacent column, dropping bullet points, scrambling dates. The resume that looks polished to a hum

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