Mob Boss
mob boss
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- Mar 21, 2026
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Thank you
Will be using this for my summer job
Will be using this for my summer job
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
Yes some jobs already have internal candidates ready and those are the only ones that go through but they have to post them for legal reasonsYou forgot about the ghost jobs these companies put out
Iโm 20 hr/week janitor now@callard @Luquier
CongratsIโm 20 hr/week janitor now![]()
Iโm gonna bookmark this@Subhuman
Not hard to rot when you are infront of a computer for most of your day.Can you make a thread about your daily schedule please, I'm genuinely so curious this is a helpful thread of course but how do you find the time and motivation to post so much on here. Are you just permarotting or what?
Holy shiii peak !!!!!!!!!@Sayori requested me to make a thread about this and I wanted to do some research
Before writing the thread and from what I found "resume tips" articles I found online are all written by people trying to sell resume builders. This thread will cut through all the fluff and make it as simple as possible.
First, the brutal math (read this before anything else)
I did some research before writing this thread and the stats are brutal
![]()
2026 Job Application Statistics
Discover key 2026 job application statistics and insights on candidate experience, employer branding, and hiring processes to attract top talent effectively.blog.hiringthing.com
Job Application Success Rate Statistics: 2026 Data
Latest hiring data: 2-3% interview conversion rate, 75% AI rejection rate, referral advantage, and what actually moves the needle for job seekers.www.careerhelp.top
Takeaway: Volume applying is a rigged lottery. The leverage is in targeting and referrals, not in blasting 500 applications and optimizing resume, Referrals and connections make a small slice of the application pool but a large chunk of people that get hired. People generally don't like referring freshers for this reason but by some way or the other try to get referral some way to ensure that a human reads your resume and not a bot with that being said if you don't have a choice this is how you need to optimize your game
- A typical posting gets ~300 applicants; entry-level roles often pull 500+.
- The cold-application interview rate is now ~2โ3%. According to some analysis cold-application offer rates for manu fresher roles as low as 0.1โ2%.
- Roughly 75% of resumes are filtered before a human sees them (ATS + AI screening).
- Average time-to-hire is ~42 days, longer for senior/specialized roles.
- Referred candidates get interviews at 40โ65%, and convert to hire at roughly 10x the rate of cold applicants. Referrals are a tiny slice of applicants but a huge slice of interviews.
Part 1 โ A resume that survives both the bot and the human
Before a human ever reads your resume. Your resume goes through an ATS filter and your job is to ensure that resume survives the parsing
View attachment 5251834
This is how your resume is supposed to look like the Jake's Resume Template on OverLeaf.
![]()
Jake's Resume - Overleaf, Online LaTeX Editor
An online LaTeX editor thatโs easy to use. No installation, real-time collaboration, version control, hundreds of LaTeX templates, and more.www.overleaf.com
No huge tables, no text boxes, no icons, no headshots, or graphics. Multi-columns and graphical templates are the number 1 cause of garbled parsing. The designer resume from Canva/Enhancv looks great but parses terribly. You can maintain two resumes one to give to AI and the beautiful one with graphics to humans in person.
Things to keep in mind
- 1โ2 pages. One page if you have <5 years experience.
- Standard section order: Contact โ Summary โ Skills โ Experience โ Education โ (Certs/Projects).
- Standard and Professional headings. "Work Expereience and technical skills not "what kind of magic i can do"
- Drop "References available on request" and the objective statements.
The Skills section is no longer optional
In the big 2026 the shift is skills-based screening. 95% of enterprise hiring teams now filter on specific required skills before even looking at experience or resume. On Workday/Greenhouse platforms, the skills section is often the first thing mapped to the scorecard. So you need to match the keywords of a job description almost word to word so your resume gets high points and actually get looked at by a human and if you don't want your resume to get lost in a sea of applicants you need to tailor one for each job specifically here are some prompts that I found to nail that
Open Claude and give these prompts in order
1. Resume Audit
Start by uploading your resume and the job description to Claude. This first prompt
2. The Experience Rewrite
While staying in the context window. Give this promot. This will use the Google XYZ formula, which is the format used by top companies to evaluate candidates: Accomplished [X] as measured by [Y] by doing [Z].
Step 3: The ATS and Hiring Manager Test
Still in the same chat. Give this prompt so it survives the ATS and something hiring manager would actually read
After this step, ask Claude to output the final resume as a clean artifact also do [FILL IN] the details before generating the reusme. You can then download it as a .docx or pdf file and use it directly.
What ATS filters for is Clarity, relevance, measurable impact. They make fast yes/no calls on role alignment, tenure, skills, location. You also need to quantify everything Reduced reporting time 20% by building a Power BI dashboard tracking 5 KPIs this is how you word it instead of a simple responsible for reporting. Modern AI parsers these days also weight evidence (tools used, scale, outcomes) over keyword density. So you must show the use of something ig you list it. Just saying you know Python wont work
The two things that get you auto-rejected
1. White/invisible keyword stuffing. There used to be an old trick to fool the ATS with invisible ink but in 2026 Workday, Greenhouse, and Lever now actively detect zero-opacity and white-on-white text and can flag your record for fraud. Any recruiter who selects-all also sees it instantly. It was even risky in 2022; it's a self-own in 2026.
2. Do not exagerrate too much. It is fine to lie a bit and exagerrate details on resume,what you shouldn't do is make up imaginary things like fake experience fake degrees etc. Even if you get through the initial ATS filter you'll be flagged as someone making lofty claims which means more scrutiny on your application
Part 2 โ How to apply
Most articles I've read online just gloss over this but this part is important and I did some research and this is what matters
1. Target ruthlessly โ match 75%+ of requirements
Broad applications convert according to stats ~2โ5%. Applications where you match most requirements convert at 10โ15%. Narrowing your target list to roles you're actually competitive for not moonshots is the single highest-leverage move you can make. Stop applying to the ones where you hit 40% of the JD and SDE-1 Google or something even you know you are not good enough fot it
2. Speed matters
Applications submitted within 48 hours of a listing going live get more attention data backs this up. After ~2 weeks, most roles already have a shortlist. Apply early or skip it. Set up alerts so you see roles fresh on.
3. Referrals are the whole game
Repeating it again because it's the biggest lever by far:
How to get one even with no network:
- Referred candidates interview at 40โ65% vs 2โ3% cold.
- Many companies run a referral-first queue or referral only jobs even that bypasses AI screening and goes straight to a human recruiter. Some reserve their first interview slots for referrals.
- A referral doesn't need to be a close friend. A weak connection who forwards your resume to the hiring manager already puts you ahead of ~90% of the pile. Ded srs
This is what I used to do to build my network years ago
- Find 2โ3 people at the target company (ideally on the team, or a recruiter) on LinkedIn.
- Send a short, direct, honest message skip the fake coffee-chat dance. People prefer a clear ask.
- Template that works:
- Personalize the first line (a recent project, a post they made, a shared background). Any Personalisation can lift reply rates substantially.
- Follow up once, 4โ7 days later, adding something new ("saw the role's still open"). Stop after 2โ3 messages. Direct LinkedIn DMs/messages tend to beat InMails for response rate. Worth buying LinkedIn premium for
4. Track everything
Run a simple sheet: company, role, date applied, source (cold vs referral), status, follow-up date. You'll lose track otherwise, and the source column tells you what's actually working so you can double down on something that is working
Part 3 โ Cover letters: when they're worth it
Don't write one for every application; that's wasted time but The data is clear that generic cover letters barely help (~+17% at most) while personalized ones can lift callbacks meaningfully (~+50%).
The one thing a cover letter does that a resume can't: Explain your red flags. Employment gap, career pivot, relocating, visa problems, or no direct experience in the exact stack they want. Your resume can't give context but the letter can so do write a CV when you can because it is the single highest-value use.
Write one when: the posting requests it (skipping a required one can kill the application outright), it's a smaller applicant pool, a career pivot, or a role you really want.
Skip it when: the posting says not to, the platform doesn't support it, or it's a high-volume skills-based role.
The modern format โ short and sharp, 150โ200 words / half a page:
Instant-reject mistakes:
- One line naming a specific reason for this company (a product, project, value โ not "I'm passionate about your industry").
- One link between your experience and their stated need, with a metric.
- One line on what you bring / a role-specific question.
On AI: Some ATS run AI-detector scoring and flag high-confidence machine text. but those detectors are unreliable and false flag human writing too the main problem with CV is being generic. Use AI for the skeleton, then replace the generic lines with specifics: a named project, a real number, your actual voice. Resume can be automated but a cover letter is more personal so try to write it yourself using the template
- "To Whom It May Concern" / "I'm passionate about your industry"
- Just restating your resume in paragraph form
- Going over half a page
Example of a good CV
View attachment 5251952
Part 4 โ Automation tools
I get asked this all the time. Jason is there a way to auto apply to jobs with a click of a button and the answer is no. The dream of scour the web, auto-apply everywhere mostly doesn't work, and it's worth knowing why before you waste your money on some scam tool that claims otherwise
Tier 0- Jobscan, Teal, and the scanner built into Simplify. You paste the job description, it scores your keyword match against your resume and flags what's missing. This is the one part of the pipeline AI does well and safely no submitting, no captcha, no account risk, fully reversible if it's wrong. Pair it with the keyword advice up in Part 1. Recommend.
Tier 1 โ Co-pilot autofill. Browser extensions that fill repetitive fields and let you confirm each submit. Examples: Simplify, LoopCV, AutoApplyMax. This is good and I recommend using
![]()
Simplify Copilot - Autofill job applications, job tracker & AI resumes - Chrome Web Store
The better way to job search. Quick apply and autofill job applications in one click. Track jobs, companies, resumes & more!chromewebstore.google.com
![]()
The job search automation platform - Loopcv
The best tool to automate your job search is herewww.loopcv.pro
![]()
AutoApplyMax - Chrome Web Store
Auto-apply & autofill job applications in one click. AI Resume & Cover Letter. ATS Checker. Track all your applications.chromewebstore.google.com
They recognize fields on Greenhouse/Lever/Ashby/Workday so you stop retyping the same answers, and because you're in the loop, you clear any captcha when it appears. Highest ROI, lowest risk was a life saver for me when I was applying. Highly recommended
Tier 2 โ Auto-pilot volume blasters.
![]()
AI Auto Apply for Jobs in 2026: How It Actually Works
A non-hyped breakdown of how AI auto-apply works in 2026, what separates real tools from scams, and which ones actually submit. Tested by FastApply.blog.fastapply.co
Ezamples are LazyApply, Sonara, FastApply and anything that advertised apply to thousands in one click. These don't work like you think they do. LinkedIn Easy Apply throttles around ~30/day and Indeed around ~50/day before anti-bot systems kick in and the real bummer is throttle is invisible your applications still send, they just stop showing up on the recruiter's side. Quality is also generic, which ATS and recruiters now actively penalize. Given the 2โ3% base rate, blasting low-quality apps is a waste of your time in my opinion
Tier 3 โ Open source (free, technical).
AIHawk / Auto_Jobs_Applier_AI_Agent
![]()
GitHub - feder-cr/Jobs_Applier_AI_Agent_AIHawk: AIHawk aims to easy job hunt process by automating the job application process. Utilizing artificial intelligence, it enables users to apply for multiple jobs in a tailored way.
AIHawk aims to easy job hunt process by automating the job application process. Utilizing artificial intelligence, it enables users to apply for multiple jobs in a tailored way. - feder-cr/Jobs_App...github.com
![]()
AI Hawk Review: The Open-Source Job Bot That's Harder Than It Looks
AI Hawk (Auto_Jobs_Applier_AIHawk) promises to automate your entire job search. But setting it up requires Python, YAML configs, and a solid tolerance for debugging. Here's an honest review โ and easier alternatives that actually work.applyghost.com
The github repo is posted above. It uses Python + Selenium + Chromedriver, plug in Ollama/Gemini. Free and hackable but setup is YAML configs + needs debugging constantly. it breaks every time LinkedIn changes their structure it is a maintenance sink and cannot be used by someone with non-technical background. If you did not understand what those words I just typed out mean it is not for you. It works okay which is why it has 30k stars on GitHub but breaks often so avoid imo.
Job discovery & tracking.
LinkedIn and Wellfound saved-search alerts because they surface postings fresh and remember applying within 48 hours matters. Teal and Huntr are also solid for tracking everything in one place. I used them extensively during my job search.
The captcha + Workday reality
There is no clean, reliable, automated captcha bypass. Services like 2captcha exist but using them at scale violates ToS and LinkedIn and other platforms actively monitor for them and using them can get accounts flagged or banned. There are tools available on the darknet that can bypass captcha illegally but again you could get perma banned and breaking them at scale is not reliable enough. A 60% success rate is not good enough when a job application is one way shot. You might find research papers or GitHub repos from academic researchers who have successfully built models to solve specific CAPTCHAs like the "clock" or "grid" challenges with good accuracy but they are mostly proofs of concept. You need a CS degree with extensive background in machine learning to even understand how to run them and what's happening. They aren't quick one click solution. Workday also maintains separate account per company, unique forms each time, frequent email verification. No bot handles it well enough it's also why general browser-agent tools struggle with it. The most realistic approach is autofill + you clicking through the gate yourself.
Don't get scammed
Job hunting is full for scams so I want to flag a few hard rules:
TLDR
- Never give a third-party tool your LinkedIn or Indeed password. Some "auto-apply" tools are straight-up data harvesters, and even the honest ones storing your login is a breach waiting to happen. Legit co-pilot extensions work inside your already logged-in browser session they never need your password. If a tool asks for it. Don't install it
- Auto-apply bots can get your account restricted or permanently banned. Losing your network and history is a way bigger cost than the few minutes you saved. This has happened to a few of my friends
- Check the extension before you install. Malicious clones with near-identical names are everywhere. Confirm the publisher, the user count, and the reviews every time, don't install random stuff on your computer.
- The system is a filter, not a meritocracy. ~2โ3% of cold apps get an interview; ~75% never reach a human. Plan accordingly.
- Resume: single-column, no graphics, plain skills section, quantify everything, match the JD's exact keywords. Use the Claude prompts above to tailor per role.
- Referrals are the whole game 10x the hit rate of cold applying. Spend 10 min finding one before you ever apply cold.
- Target roles you hit 75%+ of, and apply within 48 hours. Quality + speed beats volume.
- Cover letter only when it counts, and only if it's specific. Generic = pointless.
- Automation: there's no one-click magic. Use co-pilot autofill (Simplify/LoopCV) to kill the typing, clear captchas yourself. Volume blasters and bots = wasted money or a banned account.
- Never hand any tool your LinkedIn password.
- 40 sharp, referral-backed applications > 400 blind ones.
Nigga dnrdHoly shiii peak !!!!!!!!!![]()
You already tagged me before@Egg
nepo chad writes โlol look at my 20cm nbp cock, hr. my dad owns ur livesโ n they will lay out the red carpet upon his arrivalEven I want hear the joke @imontheloose
Bookmarked although with a criminal record is going to be hard for me@Sayori requested me to make a thread about this and I wanted to do some research
Before writing the thread and from what I found "resume tips" articles I found online are all written by people trying to sell resume builders. This thread will cut through all the fluff and make it as simple as possible.
First, the brutal math (read this before anything else)
I did some research before writing this thread and the stats are brutal
![]()
2026 Job Application Statistics
Discover key 2026 job application statistics and insights on candidate experience, employer branding, and hiring processes to attract top talent effectively.blog.hiringthing.com
Job Application Success Rate Statistics: 2026 Data
Latest hiring data: 2-3% interview conversion rate, 75% AI rejection rate, referral advantage, and what actually moves the needle for job seekers.www.careerhelp.top
Takeaway: Volume applying is a rigged lottery. The leverage is in targeting and referrals, not in blasting 500 applications and optimizing resume, Referrals and connections make a small slice of the application pool but a large chunk of people that get hired. People generally don't like referring freshers for this reason but by some way or the other try to get referral some way to ensure that a human reads your resume and not a bot with that being said if you don't have a choice this is how you need to optimize your game
- A typical posting gets ~300 applicants; entry-level roles often pull 500+.
- The cold-application interview rate is now ~2โ3%. According to some analysis cold-application offer rates for manu fresher roles as low as 0.1โ2%.
- Roughly 75% of resumes are filtered before a human sees them (ATS + AI screening).
- Average time-to-hire is ~42 days, longer for senior/specialized roles.
- Referred candidates get interviews at 40โ65%, and convert to hire at roughly 10x the rate of cold applicants. Referrals are a tiny slice of applicants but a huge slice of interviews.
Part 1 โ A resume that survives both the bot and the human
Before a human ever reads your resume. Your resume goes through an ATS filter and your job is to ensure that resume survives the parsing
View attachment 5251834
This is how your resume is supposed to look like the Jake's Resume Template on OverLeaf.
![]()
Jake's Resume - Overleaf, Online LaTeX Editor
An online LaTeX editor thatโs easy to use. No installation, real-time collaboration, version control, hundreds of LaTeX templates, and more.www.overleaf.com
No huge tables, no text boxes, no icons, no headshots, or graphics. Multi-columns and graphical templates are the number 1 cause of garbled parsing. The designer resume from Canva/Enhancv looks great but parses terribly. You can maintain two resumes one to give to AI and the beautiful one with graphics to humans in person.
Things to keep in mind
- 1โ2 pages. One page if you have <5 years experience.
- Standard section order: Contact โ Summary โ Skills โ Experience โ Education โ (Certs/Projects).
- Standard and Professional headings. "Work Expereience and technical skills not "what kind of magic i can do"
- Drop "References available on request" and the objective statements.
The Skills section is no longer optional
In the big 2026 the shift is skills-based screening. 95% of enterprise hiring teams now filter on specific required skills before even looking at experience or resume. On Workday/Greenhouse platforms, the skills section is often the first thing mapped to the scorecard. So you need to match the keywords of a job description almost word to word so your resume gets high points and actually get looked at by a human and if you don't want your resume to get lost in a sea of applicants you need to tailor one for each job specifically here are some prompts that I found to nail that
Open Claude and give these prompts in order
1. Resume Audit
Start by uploading your resume and the job description to Claude. This first prompt
2. The Experience Rewrite
While staying in the context window. Give this promot. This will use the Google XYZ formula, which is the format used by top companies to evaluate candidates: Accomplished [X] as measured by [Y] by doing [Z].
Step 3: The ATS and Hiring Manager Test
Still in the same chat. Give this prompt so it survives the ATS and something hiring manager would actually read
After this step, ask Claude to output the final resume as a clean artifact also do [FILL IN] the details before generating the reusme. You can then download it as a .docx or pdf file and use it directly.
What ATS filters for is Clarity, relevance, measurable impact. They make fast yes/no calls on role alignment, tenure, skills, location. You also need to quantify everything Reduced reporting time 20% by building a Power BI dashboard tracking 5 KPIs this is how you word it instead of a simple responsible for reporting. Modern AI parsers these days also weight evidence (tools used, scale, outcomes) over keyword density. So you must show the use of something ig you list it. Just saying you know Python wont work
The two things that get you auto-rejected
1. White/invisible keyword stuffing. There used to be an old trick to fool the ATS with invisible ink but in 2026 Workday, Greenhouse, and Lever now actively detect zero-opacity and white-on-white text and can flag your record for fraud. Any recruiter who selects-all also sees it instantly. It was even risky in 2022; it's a self-own in 2026.
2. Do not exagerrate too much. It is fine to lie a bit and exagerrate details on resume,what you shouldn't do is make up imaginary things like fake experience fake degrees etc. Even if you get through the initial ATS filter you'll be flagged as someone making lofty claims which means more scrutiny on your application
Part 2 โ How to apply
Most articles I've read online just gloss over this but this part is important and I did some research and this is what matters
1. Target ruthlessly โ match 75%+ of requirements
Broad applications convert according to stats ~2โ5%. Applications where you match most requirements convert at 10โ15%. Narrowing your target list to roles you're actually competitive for not moonshots is the single highest-leverage move you can make. Stop applying to the ones where you hit 40% of the JD and SDE-1 Google or something even you know you are not good enough fot it
2. Speed matters
Applications submitted within 48 hours of a listing going live get more attention data backs this up. After ~2 weeks, most roles already have a shortlist. Apply early or skip it. Set up alerts so you see roles fresh on.
3. Referrals are the whole game
Repeating it again because it's the biggest lever by far:
How to get one even with no network:
- Referred candidates interview at 40โ65% vs 2โ3% cold.
- Many companies run a referral-first queue or referral only jobs even that bypasses AI screening and goes straight to a human recruiter. Some reserve their first interview slots for referrals.
- A referral doesn't need to be a close friend. A weak connection who forwards your resume to the hiring manager already puts you ahead of ~90% of the pile. Ded srs
This is what I used to do to build my network years ago
- Find 2โ3 people at the target company (ideally on the team, or a recruiter) on LinkedIn.
- Send a short, direct, honest message skip the fake coffee-chat dance. People prefer a clear ask.
- Template that works:
- Personalize the first line (a recent project, a post they made, a shared background). Any Personalisation can lift reply rates substantially.
- Follow up once, 4โ7 days later, adding something new ("saw the role's still open"). Stop after 2โ3 messages. Direct LinkedIn DMs/messages tend to beat InMails for response rate. Worth buying LinkedIn premium for
4. Track everything
Run a simple sheet: company, role, date applied, source (cold vs referral), status, follow-up date. You'll lose track otherwise, and the source column tells you what's actually working so you can double down on something that is working
Part 3 โ Cover letters: when they're worth it
Don't write one for every application; that's wasted time but The data is clear that generic cover letters barely help (~+17% at most) while personalized ones can lift callbacks meaningfully (~+50%).
The one thing a cover letter does that a resume can't: Explain your red flags. Employment gap, career pivot, relocating, visa problems, or no direct experience in the exact stack they want. Your resume can't give context but the letter can so do write a CV when you can because it is the single highest-value use.
Write one when: the posting requests it (skipping a required one can kill the application outright), it's a smaller applicant pool, a career pivot, or a role you really want.
Skip it when: the posting says not to, the platform doesn't support it, or it's a high-volume skills-based role.
The modern format โ short and sharp, 150โ200 words / half a page:
Instant-reject mistakes:
- One line naming a specific reason for this company (a product, project, value โ not "I'm passionate about your industry").
- One link between your experience and their stated need, with a metric.
- One line on what you bring / a role-specific question.
On AI: Some ATS run AI-detector scoring and flag high-confidence machine text. but those detectors are unreliable and false flag human writing too the main problem with CV is being generic. Use AI for the skeleton, then replace the generic lines with specifics: a named project, a real number, your actual voice. Resume can be automated but a cover letter is more personal so try to write it yourself using the template
- "To Whom It May Concern" / "I'm passionate about your industry"
- Just restating your resume in paragraph form
- Going over half a page
Example of a good CV
View attachment 5251952
Part 4 โ Automation tools
I get asked this all the time. Jason is there a way to auto apply to jobs with a click of a button and the answer is no. The dream of scour the web, auto-apply everywhere mostly doesn't work, and it's worth knowing why before you waste your money on some scam tool that claims otherwise
Tier 0- Jobscan, Teal, and the scanner built into Simplify. You paste the job description, it scores your keyword match against your resume and flags what's missing. This is the one part of the pipeline AI does well and safely no submitting, no captcha, no account risk, fully reversible if it's wrong. Pair it with the keyword advice up in Part 1. Recommend.
Tier 1 โ Co-pilot autofill. Browser extensions that fill repetitive fields and let you confirm each submit. Examples: Simplify, LoopCV, AutoApplyMax. This is good and I recommend using
![]()
Simplify Copilot - Autofill job applications, job tracker & AI resumes - Chrome Web Store
The better way to job search. Quick apply and autofill job applications in one click. Track jobs, companies, resumes & more!chromewebstore.google.com
![]()
The job search automation platform - Loopcv
The best tool to automate your job search is herewww.loopcv.pro
![]()
AutoApplyMax - Chrome Web Store
Auto-apply & autofill job applications in one click. AI Resume & Cover Letter. ATS Checker. Track all your applications.chromewebstore.google.com
They recognize fields on Greenhouse/Lever/Ashby/Workday so you stop retyping the same answers, and because you're in the loop, you clear any captcha when it appears. Highest ROI, lowest risk was a life saver for me when I was applying. Highly recommended
Tier 2 โ Auto-pilot volume blasters.
![]()
AI Auto Apply for Jobs in 2026: How It Actually Works
A non-hyped breakdown of how AI auto-apply works in 2026, what separates real tools from scams, and which ones actually submit. Tested by FastApply.blog.fastapply.co
Ezamples are LazyApply, Sonara, FastApply and anything that advertised apply to thousands in one click. These don't work like you think they do. LinkedIn Easy Apply throttles around ~30/day and Indeed around ~50/day before anti-bot systems kick in and the real bummer is throttle is invisible your applications still send, they just stop showing up on the recruiter's side. Quality is also generic, which ATS and recruiters now actively penalize. Given the 2โ3% base rate, blasting low-quality apps is a waste of your time in my opinion
Tier 3 โ Open source (free, technical).
AIHawk / Auto_Jobs_Applier_AI_Agent
![]()
GitHub - feder-cr/Jobs_Applier_AI_Agent_AIHawk: AIHawk aims to easy job hunt process by automating the job application process. Utilizing artificial intelligence, it enables users to apply for multiple jobs in a tailored way.
AIHawk aims to easy job hunt process by automating the job application process. Utilizing artificial intelligence, it enables users to apply for multiple jobs in a tailored way. - feder-cr/Jobs_App...github.com
![]()
AI Hawk Review: The Open-Source Job Bot That's Harder Than It Looks
AI Hawk (Auto_Jobs_Applier_AIHawk) promises to automate your entire job search. But setting it up requires Python, YAML configs, and a solid tolerance for debugging. Here's an honest review โ and easier alternatives that actually work.applyghost.com
The github repo is posted above. It uses Python + Selenium + Chromedriver, plug in Ollama/Gemini. Free and hackable but setup is YAML configs + needs debugging constantly. it breaks every time LinkedIn changes their structure it is a maintenance sink and cannot be used by someone with non-technical background. If you did not understand what those words I just typed out mean it is not for you. It works okay which is why it has 30k stars on GitHub but breaks often so avoid imo.
Job discovery & tracking.
LinkedIn and Wellfound saved-search alerts because they surface postings fresh and remember applying within 48 hours matters. Teal and Huntr are also solid for tracking everything in one place. I used them extensively during my job search.
The captcha + Workday reality
There is no clean, reliable, automated captcha bypass. Services like 2captcha exist but using them at scale violates ToS and LinkedIn and other platforms actively monitor for them and using them can get accounts flagged or banned. There are tools available on the darknet that can bypass captcha illegally but again you could get perma banned and breaking them at scale is not reliable enough. A 60% success rate is not good enough when a job application is one way shot. You might find research papers or GitHub repos from academic researchers who have successfully built models to solve specific CAPTCHAs like the "clock" or "grid" challenges with good accuracy but they are mostly proofs of concept. You need a CS degree with extensive background in machine learning to even understand how to run them and what's happening. They aren't quick one click solution. Workday also maintains separate account per company, unique forms each time, frequent email verification. No bot handles it well enough it's also why general browser-agent tools struggle with it. The most realistic approach is autofill + you clicking through the gate yourself.
Don't get scammed
Job hunting is full for scams so I want to flag a few hard rules:
TLDR
- Never give a third-party tool your LinkedIn or Indeed password. Some "auto-apply" tools are straight-up data harvesters, and even the honest ones storing your login is a breach waiting to happen. Legit co-pilot extensions work inside your already logged-in browser session they never need your password. If a tool asks for it. Don't install it
- Auto-apply bots can get your account restricted or permanently banned. Losing your network and history is a way bigger cost than the few minutes you saved. This has happened to a few of my friends
- Check the extension before you install. Malicious clones with near-identical names are everywhere. Confirm the publisher, the user count, and the reviews every time, don't install random stuff on your computer.
- The system is a filter, not a meritocracy. ~2โ3% of cold apps get an interview; ~75% never reach a human. Plan accordingly.
- Resume: single-column, no graphics, plain skills section, quantify everything, match the JD's exact keywords. Use the Claude prompts above to tailor per role.
- Referrals are the whole game 10x the hit rate of cold applying. Spend 10 min finding one before you ever apply cold.
- Target roles you hit 75%+ of, and apply within 48 hours. Quality + speed beats volume.
- Cover letter only when it counts, and only if it's specific. Generic = pointless.
- Automation: there's no one-click magic. Use co-pilot autofill (Simplify/LoopCV) to kill the typing, clear captchas yourself. Volume blasters and bots = wasted money or a banned account.
- Never hand any tool your LinkedIn password.
- 40 sharp, referral-backed applications > 400 blind ones.
not everyone can be as fortunate as younepo chad writes โlol look at my 20cm nbp cock, hr. my dad owns ur livesโ n they will lay out the red carpet upon his arrival
social worker in local immigration centreBookmarked although with a criminal record is going to be hard for me![]()
Amazing thread will use.@Sayori requested me to make a thread about this and I wanted to do some research
Before writing the thread and from what I found "resume tips" articles I found online are all written by people trying to sell resume builders. This thread will cut through all the fluff and make it as simple as possible.
First, the brutal math (read this before anything else)
I did some research before writing this thread and the stats are brutal
![]()
2026 Job Application Statistics
Discover key 2026 job application statistics and insights on candidate experience, employer branding, and hiring processes to attract top talent effectively.blog.hiringthing.com
Job Application Success Rate Statistics: 2026 Data
Latest hiring data: 2-3% interview conversion rate, 75% AI rejection rate, referral advantage, and what actually moves the needle for job seekers.www.careerhelp.top
Takeaway: Volume applying is a rigged lottery. The leverage is in targeting and referrals, not in blasting 500 applications and optimizing resume, Referrals and connections make a small slice of the application pool but a large chunk of people that get hired. People generally don't like referring freshers for this reason but by some way or the other try to get referral some way to ensure that a human reads your resume and not a bot with that being said if you don't have a choice this is how you need to optimize your game
- A typical posting gets ~300 applicants; entry-level roles often pull 500+.
- The cold-application interview rate is now ~2โ3%. According to some analysis cold-application offer rates for manu fresher roles as low as 0.1โ2%.
- Roughly 75% of resumes are filtered before a human sees them (ATS + AI screening).
- Average time-to-hire is ~42 days, longer for senior/specialized roles.
- Referred candidates get interviews at 40โ65%, and convert to hire at roughly 10x the rate of cold applicants. Referrals are a tiny slice of applicants but a huge slice of interviews.
Part 1 โ A resume that survives both the bot and the human
Before a human ever reads your resume. Your resume goes through an ATS filter and your job is to ensure that resume survives the parsing
View attachment 5251834
This is how your resume is supposed to look like the Jake's Resume Template on OverLeaf.
![]()
Jake's Resume - Overleaf, Online LaTeX Editor
An online LaTeX editor thatโs easy to use. No installation, real-time collaboration, version control, hundreds of LaTeX templates, and more.www.overleaf.com
No huge tables, no text boxes, no icons, no headshots, or graphics. Multi-columns and graphical templates are the number 1 cause of garbled parsing. The designer resume from Canva/Enhancv looks great but parses terribly. You can maintain two resumes one to give to AI and the beautiful one with graphics to humans in person.
Things to keep in mind
- 1โ2 pages. One page if you have <5 years experience.
- Standard section order: Contact โ Summary โ Skills โ Experience โ Education โ (Certs/Projects).
- Standard and Professional headings. "Work Expereience and technical skills not "what kind of magic i can do"
- Drop "References available on request" and the objective statements.
The Skills section is no longer optional
In the big 2026 the shift is skills-based screening. 95% of enterprise hiring teams now filter on specific required skills before even looking at experience or resume. On Workday/Greenhouse platforms, the skills section is often the first thing mapped to the scorecard. So you need to match the keywords of a job description almost word to word so your resume gets high points and actually get looked at by a human and if you don't want your resume to get lost in a sea of applicants you need to tailor one for each job specifically here are some prompts that I found to nail that
Open Claude and give these prompts in order
1. Resume Audit
Start by uploading your resume and the job description to Claude. This first prompt
2. The Experience Rewrite
While staying in the context window. Give this promot. This will use the Google XYZ formula, which is the format used by top companies to evaluate candidates: Accomplished [X] as measured by [Y] by doing [Z].
Step 3: The ATS and Hiring Manager Test
Still in the same chat. Give this prompt so it survives the ATS and something hiring manager would actually read
After this step, ask Claude to output the final resume as a clean artifact also do [FILL IN] the details before generating the reusme. You can then download it as a .docx or pdf file and use it directly.
What ATS filters for is Clarity, relevance, measurable impact. They make fast yes/no calls on role alignment, tenure, skills, location. You also need to quantify everything Reduced reporting time 20% by building a Power BI dashboard tracking 5 KPIs this is how you word it instead of a simple responsible for reporting. Modern AI parsers these days also weight evidence (tools used, scale, outcomes) over keyword density. So you must show the use of something ig you list it. Just saying you know Python wont work
The two things that get you auto-rejected
1. White/invisible keyword stuffing. There used to be an old trick to fool the ATS with invisible ink but in 2026 Workday, Greenhouse, and Lever now actively detect zero-opacity and white-on-white text and can flag your record for fraud. Any recruiter who selects-all also sees it instantly. It was even risky in 2022; it's a self-own in 2026.
2. Do not exagerrate too much. It is fine to lie a bit and exagerrate details on resume,what you shouldn't do is make up imaginary things like fake experience fake degrees etc. Even if you get through the initial ATS filter you'll be flagged as someone making lofty claims which means more scrutiny on your application
Part 2 โ How to apply
Most articles I've read online just gloss over this but this part is important and I did some research and this is what matters
1. Target ruthlessly โ match 75%+ of requirements
Broad applications convert according to stats ~2โ5%. Applications where you match most requirements convert at 10โ15%. Narrowing your target list to roles you're actually competitive for not moonshots is the single highest-leverage move you can make. Stop applying to the ones where you hit 40% of the JD and SDE-1 Google or something even you know you are not good enough fot it
2. Speed matters
Applications submitted within 48 hours of a listing going live get more attention data backs this up. After ~2 weeks, most roles already have a shortlist. Apply early or skip it. Set up alerts so you see roles fresh on.
3. Referrals are the whole game
Repeating it again because it's the biggest lever by far:
How to get one even with no network:
- Referred candidates interview at 40โ65% vs 2โ3% cold.
- Many companies run a referral-first queue or referral only jobs even that bypasses AI screening and goes straight to a human recruiter. Some reserve their first interview slots for referrals.
- A referral doesn't need to be a close friend. A weak connection who forwards your resume to the hiring manager already puts you ahead of ~90% of the pile. Ded srs
This is what I used to do to build my network years ago
- Find 2โ3 people at the target company (ideally on the team, or a recruiter) on LinkedIn.
- Send a short, direct, honest message skip the fake coffee-chat dance. People prefer a clear ask.
- Template that works:
- Personalize the first line (a recent project, a post they made, a shared background). Any Personalisation can lift reply rates substantially.
- Follow up once, 4โ7 days later, adding something new ("saw the role's still open"). Stop after 2โ3 messages. Direct LinkedIn DMs/messages tend to beat InMails for response rate. Worth buying LinkedIn premium for
4. Track everything
Run a simple sheet: company, role, date applied, source (cold vs referral), status, follow-up date. You'll lose track otherwise, and the source column tells you what's actually working so you can double down on something that is working
Part 3 โ Cover letters: when they're worth it
Don't write one for every application; that's wasted time but The data is clear that generic cover letters barely help (~+17% at most) while personalized ones can lift callbacks meaningfully (~+50%).
The one thing a cover letter does that a resume can't: Explain your red flags. Employment gap, career pivot, relocating, visa problems, or no direct experience in the exact stack they want. Your resume can't give context but the letter can so do write a CV when you can because it is the single highest-value use.
Write one when: the posting requests it (skipping a required one can kill the application outright), it's a smaller applicant pool, a career pivot, or a role you really want.
Skip it when: the posting says not to, the platform doesn't support it, or it's a high-volume skills-based role.
The modern format โ short and sharp, 150โ200 words / half a page:
Instant-reject mistakes:
- One line naming a specific reason for this company (a product, project, value โ not "I'm passionate about your industry").
- One link between your experience and their stated need, with a metric.
- One line on what you bring / a role-specific question.
On AI: Some ATS run AI-detector scoring and flag high-confidence machine text. but those detectors are unreliable and false flag human writing too the main problem with CV is being generic. Use AI for the skeleton, then replace the generic lines with specifics: a named project, a real number, your actual voice. Resume can be automated but a cover letter is more personal so try to write it yourself using the template
- "To Whom It May Concern" / "I'm passionate about your industry"
- Just restating your resume in paragraph form
- Going over half a page
Example of a good CV
View attachment 5251952
Part 4 โ Automation tools
I get asked this all the time. Jason is there a way to auto apply to jobs with a click of a button and the answer is no. The dream of scour the web, auto-apply everywhere mostly doesn't work, and it's worth knowing why before you waste your money on some scam tool that claims otherwise
Tier 0- Jobscan, Teal, and the scanner built into Simplify. You paste the job description, it scores your keyword match against your resume and flags what's missing. This is the one part of the pipeline AI does well and safely no submitting, no captcha, no account risk, fully reversible if it's wrong. Pair it with the keyword advice up in Part 1. Recommend.
Tier 1 โ Co-pilot autofill. Browser extensions that fill repetitive fields and let you confirm each submit. Examples: Simplify, LoopCV, AutoApplyMax. This is good and I recommend using
![]()
Simplify Copilot - Autofill job applications, job tracker & AI resumes - Chrome Web Store
The better way to job search. Quick apply and autofill job applications in one click. Track jobs, companies, resumes & more!chromewebstore.google.com
![]()
The job search automation platform - Loopcv
The best tool to automate your job search is herewww.loopcv.pro
![]()
AutoApplyMax - Chrome Web Store
Auto-apply & autofill job applications in one click. AI Resume & Cover Letter. ATS Checker. Track all your applications.chromewebstore.google.com
They recognize fields on Greenhouse/Lever/Ashby/Workday so you stop retyping the same answers, and because you're in the loop, you clear any captcha when it appears. Highest ROI, lowest risk was a life saver for me when I was applying. Highly recommended
Tier 2 โ Auto-pilot volume blasters.
![]()
AI Auto Apply for Jobs in 2026: How It Actually Works
A non-hyped breakdown of how AI auto-apply works in 2026, what separates real tools from scams, and which ones actually submit. Tested by FastApply.blog.fastapply.co
Ezamples are LazyApply, Sonara, FastApply and anything that advertised apply to thousands in one click. These don't work like you think they do. LinkedIn Easy Apply throttles around ~30/day and Indeed around ~50/day before anti-bot systems kick in and the real bummer is throttle is invisible your applications still send, they just stop showing up on the recruiter's side. Quality is also generic, which ATS and recruiters now actively penalize. Given the 2โ3% base rate, blasting low-quality apps is a waste of your time in my opinion
Tier 3 โ Open source (free, technical).
AIHawk / Auto_Jobs_Applier_AI_Agent
![]()
GitHub - feder-cr/Jobs_Applier_AI_Agent_AIHawk: AIHawk aims to easy job hunt process by automating the job application process. Utilizing artificial intelligence, it enables users to apply for multiple jobs in a tailored way.
AIHawk aims to easy job hunt process by automating the job application process. Utilizing artificial intelligence, it enables users to apply for multiple jobs in a tailored way. - feder-cr/Jobs_App...github.com
![]()
AI Hawk Review: The Open-Source Job Bot That's Harder Than It Looks
AI Hawk (Auto_Jobs_Applier_AIHawk) promises to automate your entire job search. But setting it up requires Python, YAML configs, and a solid tolerance for debugging. Here's an honest review โ and easier alternatives that actually work.applyghost.com
The github repo is posted above. It uses Python + Selenium + Chromedriver, plug in Ollama/Gemini. Free and hackable but setup is YAML configs + needs debugging constantly. it breaks every time LinkedIn changes their structure it is a maintenance sink and cannot be used by someone with non-technical background. If you did not understand what those words I just typed out mean it is not for you. It works okay which is why it has 30k stars on GitHub but breaks often so avoid imo.
Job discovery & tracking.
LinkedIn and Wellfound saved-search alerts because they surface postings fresh and remember applying within 48 hours matters. Teal and Huntr are also solid for tracking everything in one place. I used them extensively during my job search.
The captcha + Workday reality
There is no clean, reliable, automated captcha bypass. Services like 2captcha exist but using them at scale violates ToS and LinkedIn and other platforms actively monitor for them and using them can get accounts flagged or banned. There are tools available on the darknet that can bypass captcha illegally but again you could get perma banned and breaking them at scale is not reliable enough. A 60% success rate is not good enough when a job application is one way shot. You might find research papers or GitHub repos from academic researchers who have successfully built models to solve specific CAPTCHAs like the "clock" or "grid" challenges with good accuracy but they are mostly proofs of concept. You need a CS degree with extensive background in machine learning to even understand how to run them and what's happening. They aren't quick one click solution. Workday also maintains separate account per company, unique forms each time, frequent email verification. No bot handles it well enough it's also why general browser-agent tools struggle with it. The most realistic approach is autofill + you clicking through the gate yourself.
Don't get scammed
Job hunting is full for scams so I want to flag a few hard rules:
TLDR
- Never give a third-party tool your LinkedIn or Indeed password. Some "auto-apply" tools are straight-up data harvesters, and even the honest ones storing your login is a breach waiting to happen. Legit co-pilot extensions work inside your already logged-in browser session they never need your password. If a tool asks for it. Don't install it
- Auto-apply bots can get your account restricted or permanently banned. Losing your network and history is a way bigger cost than the few minutes you saved. This has happened to a few of my friends
- Check the extension before you install. Malicious clones with near-identical names are everywhere. Confirm the publisher, the user count, and the reviews every time, don't install random stuff on your computer.
- The system is a filter, not a meritocracy. ~2โ3% of cold apps get an interview; ~75% never reach a human. Plan accordingly.
- Resume: single-column, no graphics, plain skills section, quantify everything, match the JD's exact keywords. Use the Claude prompts above to tailor per role.
- Referrals are the whole game 10x the hit rate of cold applying. Spend 10 min finding one before you ever apply cold.
- Target roles you hit 75%+ of, and apply within 48 hours. Quality + speed beats volume.
- Cover letter only when it counts, and only if it's specific. Generic = pointless.
- Automation: there's no one-click magic. Use co-pilot autofill (Simplify/LoopCV) to kill the typing, clear captchas yourself. Volume blasters and bots = wasted money or a banned account.
- Never hand any tool your LinkedIn password.
- 40 sharp, referral-backed applications > 400 blind ones.