Can AI Write My Resume?
Going to Ace Hardware and buying a hammer doesn't mean you know how to build a house. AI works the same way. Access to a tool doesn't equal proficiency with it. ChatGPT, and every AI resume builder on the market, is genuinely impressive technology. It can get you from zero to something in about four minutes, which is not nothing. Staring at a blank page is its own kind of paralysis, and if AI helps you break through that, great.
But here's what people skip over: if you don't already know what a good resume looks like, you won't know whether what AI gave you is actually good. You'll just know it looks like a resume. And "looks like a resume" and "gets you callbacks" are two very different things.
What AI Resumes Actually Look Like in the Wild
I see resumes every day. I mean that literally. It's my job. I can spot an AI-generated resume pretty quickly. Here's what they tend to have in common:
The opening summary that says nothing. "Results-driven professional with a proven track record of leveraging synergistic solutions to drive impactful outcomes." Cool. Who are you though? What do you actually do? AI loves this kind of language because it sounds impressive. Hiring managers have read it ten thousand times and their eyes glaze right over it.
Bullet points that start the same way. Every time. "Responsible for managing..." "Responsible for leading..." "Responsible for overseeing..." AI defaults to "responsible for" the way a nervous presenter defaults to "um." It fills space. It doesn't communicate value.
"Efficiently and effectively" sprinkled throughout like seasoning. If I had a dollar for every AI resume that used the phrase "efficiently and effectively" in three separate bullet points, I'd have a lot of dollars.
Extra content that wasn't in your original information. This one is actually a problem. AI will sometimes add details, embellish responsibilities, or reframe your experience in ways that are just not accurate. And now you're sitting in an interview being asked about a project you didn't actually lead.
Wordiness where there should be precision. My personal philosophy in resume writing is brevity with impact. AI tends to go the other direction with more words, more bullets, more filler.
The Part AI Can't Do
Here's what no AI tool has figured out yet: it can't have a conversation with you.
It can't ask the follow-up question that pulls out the accomplishment you forgot to mention. It can't hear you describe something and say "wait, that's actually more significant than you're giving it credit for." It can't recognize that the way you just explained something out loud is exactly how it should read on the page.
AI works with the information you give it. If you don't know how to articulate your own experience, AI is just going to dress up your confusion in fancier language. The human element isn't just about warmth or personality. It's about differentiation. Your resume should sound like a specific person who does specific things and gets specific results. AI gives you a template with your name on it. That's not the same thing.
Where AI Actually Is Useful
I'm not here to tell you AI is useless. That would be dishonest, and honestly, a little dramatic.
AI is a solid idea generator. It can help you brainstorm bullet points, suggest action verbs, or give you a rough structure to react to. Getting from zero to one is genuinely hard, and if AI helps you get something on the page, that's a legitimate use of the tool.
The problem is when people stop there and assume the first draft is the final draft. It's not. It's a starting point that is only useful if you have the expertise to evaluate and improve what it gave you.
If you don't have that expertise, you need a human.
So What Should You Actually Do?
That depends on where you are in the process.
If you have a solid resume and just need light cleanup, AI tools can help you tighten language or tailor bullet points for a specific job posting.
If your resume isn't getting callbacks, if you're making a career transition, if you've been out of the job market for years, or if you genuinely don't know how to talk about your own experience, AI is not going to solve that problem. It's going to give you a polished version of the same issue.
That's where a real conversation with a real person changes things.
The Free Resume Review Is a Good Place to Start
If you're not sure whether your current resume, AI-generated or otherwise, is actually working, start there. I'll take a look at what you have and give you honest feedback.
Your resume's only job is to get you the interview. If it's not doing that, something needs to change.
[Claim your free resume review here]
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I just use ChatGPT to write my resume for free? You can, and plenty of people do. The issue isn't the cost. It's the output. AI can produce something that looks like a resume without producing something that works like one. If you're not getting interviews, the price you paid for the tool is beside the point.
How can I tell if my AI-generated resume is actually good? If you're asking that question, you probably already sense something is off. Look for vague, generic language in your summary, repetitive phrasing in your bullet points, and anything that doesn't sound like something you'd actually say. If it reads like it could belong to anyone in your field, it needs work.
Is it bad to use AI as a starting point and then hire a writer? Not at all. Bringing me a rough AI draft is like bringing a contractor your sketch of a floor plan. It gives us a starting point. I'll rebuild what needs rebuilding and keep what's actually working.
What does AI get wrong about career transitions specifically? A lot. Career transitions require strategic framing, including connecting what you've done to where you're going in a way that makes sense to a hiring manager who doesn't automatically see the through line. AI doesn't understand narrative arc. It lists. It doesn't position.
My resume was written by AI and I have been getting interviews. Should I still get it reviewed? If it's working, great! Your resume is doing its job. I would still encourage a review before you level up or make a bigger move. What works at one career stage doesn't always translate to the next.
Will AI eventually replace resume writers? AI is getting more sophisticated, partly because more people are feeding it information to learn from. But sophistication isn't the same as understanding. The nuance of someone's career story, the strategic framing of a pivot, the human instinct that says "this bullet point is underselling you" is something AI has not figured out. At least not yet. I'll keep you posted.