Here’s what most job seekers get wrong: they open ChatGPT, type “write me a resume,” and paste whatever comes out into their application. The result reads like it was written by a robot — because it was. Recruiters can spot it immediately, and ATS systems don’t care how polished your sentences sound if the right keywords aren’t there.
The fix isn’t to stop using AI. It’s to use it strategically, with the right prompts.
In this guide, you’ll get 7 ready-to-use AI prompts that transform a generic resume into one that’s tailored, keyword-optimized, and ATS-friendly — for any job you apply to. Just copy, paste into ChatGPT or Claude, and plug in your details.
## Why Generic AI Output Kills Your Job Search
When you ask AI to “write a resume,” it pulls from patterns in its training data. The output sounds professional but lacks the one thing ATS systems care about most: **alignment with the specific job description you’re applying to.**
Every job posting contains a unique fingerprint — a combination of required skills, preferred qualifications, action verbs, and industry jargon. An ATS compares your resume against this fingerprint and assigns a match score. If your score is below the threshold (usually 70–80%), your resume never reaches a human.
This is why tailoring matters more than perfection. A slightly rough resume that hits 90% keyword match will outperform a beautifully written one that scores 45% every single time.
The prompts below solve this by forcing the AI to analyze the specific job description first, then rebuild your resume around it.
## Prompt 1: The ATS Keyword Gap Finder
Before you rewrite anything, you need to know what’s missing. This prompt turns AI into an ATS simulator that tells you exactly which keywords your resume is lacking.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “You are an ATS (Applicant Tracking System) scanner. I’m going to give you my current resume and a job description. Compare them and give me:
> 1. An estimated ATS match score out of 100
> 2. The top 10 keywords from the job description that are MISSING from my resume
> 3. Keywords I already have that match well
> 4. 3 specific suggestions to improve my score
>
> Here is my resume: [PASTE YOUR RESUME]
>
> Here is the job description: [PASTE THE JOB DESCRIPTION]”
**Why it works:** Instead of guessing which keywords matter, you get a prioritized gap analysis. Focus your edits on the missing keywords that appear most frequently in the job description — those carry the heaviest weight in ATS scoring.
**Before:** ATS score of 41/100, missing 12 critical keywords
**After running this prompt:** Clear roadmap showing exactly which terms to add and where
## Prompt 2: The Bullet Point Rewriter (Action Verb + Metrics)
Weak bullet points are the #1 reason resumes fail to impress — both ATS and humans. This prompt rewrites your bullets using the formula that recruiters love: strong action verb + measurable result + relevant keyword.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “Rewrite each of the following resume bullet points. For each one:
> – Start with a powerful action verb (not ‘Responsible for’ or ‘Helped with’)
> – Add a specific, quantified result (percentage, dollar amount, time saved, or team size)
> – Naturally include the keyword [INSERT KEYWORD FROM JOB DESCRIPTION]
> – Keep each bullet under 20 words
>
> If I don’t have exact numbers, suggest realistic placeholders I can fill in based on common outcomes for this type of work.
>
> My current bullets:
> [PASTE YOUR BULLET POINTS]”
**Before:**
“Responsible for managing social media accounts and creating content for the marketing team.”
**After:**
“Spearheaded social media strategy across 4 platforms, increasing engagement by 47% and driving 2,100+ monthly qualified leads.”
The difference is night and day. The second version tells a recruiter exactly what you did, how well you did it, and uses keywords that match modern marketing job descriptions.
## Prompt 3: The Resume Summary Generator
Your resume summary sits at the top of the document — and ATS systems weight it heavily for keyword matching. A weak summary wastes your most valuable real estate. This prompt generates a tailored one in seconds.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “Write a 3-sentence professional resume summary for a [JOB TITLE] role at [COMPANY NAME]. Use this formula:
> – Sentence 1: My title + years of experience + 2-3 core skills from the job description
> – Sentence 2: My biggest measurable achievement that’s relevant to this role
> – Sentence 3: A unique differentiator or certification that sets me apart
>
> Mirror the exact language from this job description: [PASTE JOB DESCRIPTION]
>
> My background: [2-3 SENTENCES ABOUT YOUR EXPERIENCE]”
**Before:**
“Experienced professional seeking a challenging role where I can utilize my skills and contribute to company growth.”
**After:**
“Senior Data Analyst with 6 years of experience in SQL, Python, and Tableau, specializing in cross-functional reporting for SaaS platforms. Reduced customer churn by 18% through predictive modeling that identified 3 at-risk segments before renewal cycles. AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner with a proven track record of translating complex datasets into executive-level dashboards.”
Notice how the “after” version is packed with specific keywords (SQL, Python, Tableau, SaaS, predictive modeling) that an ATS will immediately pick up, while still reading naturally to a human.
## Prompt 4: The Cover Letter Customizer
Most job seekers either skip the cover letter entirely or use the same generic one for every application. This prompt generates a role-specific cover letter in under 2 minutes.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “Write a cover letter for [JOB TITLE] at [COMPANY NAME]. Structure it as:
>
> Paragraph 1 (Hook): Open with something specific about the company’s recent work, product, or mission that genuinely interests me. Not generic flattery — something that shows I’ve done research.
>
> Paragraph 2 (Proof): Connect my most relevant achievement to their biggest stated need in the job description. Use one specific metric.
>
> Paragraph 3 (Fit): Explain why my working style or values align with their team culture. Reference something from their careers page, Glassdoor reviews, or recent news.
>
> Paragraph 4 (Close): Confident but not pushy. Suggest a specific next step.
>
> Keep the total under 250 words. Tone: professional but human — not robotic.
>
> Job description: [PASTE JD]
> My background: [PASTE KEY ACHIEVEMENTS]
> Company research: [PASTE ANY NOTES YOU HAVE]”
**Pro tip:** Spend 5 minutes on the company’s LinkedIn page, recent blog posts, or press releases before running this prompt. The more specific research you feed in, the more personalized (and effective) the output becomes.
## Prompt 5: The LinkedIn About Section Rewriter
Your LinkedIn profile is often the second thing a recruiter checks after your resume — and many ATS systems pull directly from LinkedIn. This prompt optimizes your About section for both discoverability and human engagement.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “Rewrite my LinkedIn About section to attract recruiters for [TARGET ROLE]. Follow this structure:
> – Line 1: A hook that stops the scroll — not ‘I am a passionate professional.’ Something specific about what makes my work different.
> – Lines 2-4: My core expertise and the results I deliver, using keywords from typical [TARGET ROLE] job descriptions
> – Lines 5-6: A brief story or example that proves my value (not just claims)
> – Last line: A clear call to action for recruiters or hiring managers
>
> Write in first person. Keep it under 220 words. Use line breaks for readability. Include at least 5 keywords that recruiters for [TARGET ROLE] would search on LinkedIn.
>
> My current About section: [PASTE IT]
> My target role: [TARGET ROLE]”
**Why LinkedIn optimization matters:** LinkedIn’s algorithm works similarly to ATS — it matches profile keywords against what recruiters search for. If your About section says “experienced professional” instead of “Senior Product Manager with B2B SaaS experience,” you’re invisible to recruiters searching for those specific terms.
## Prompt 6: The Interview Answer Builder (STAR Format)
Once your resume lands you the interview, you need to deliver your stories with the same precision. This prompt transforms your rough experience into polished STAR-format answers.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “I have a job interview for [ROLE] at [COMPANY]. Build a STAR-format answer for this question: ‘[INTERVIEW QUESTION]’
>
> Use my experience below to create the answer:
> – Situation: [DESCRIBE THE CONTEXT IN 1-2 SENTENCES]
> – What I actually did: [DESCRIBE YOUR ACTIONS]
> – What happened: [DESCRIBE THE OUTCOME]
>
> Make the answer sound natural and conversational — not rehearsed. It should take about 60-90 seconds to speak out loud. End with what I learned or how it applies to this new role.
>
> If my details are vague, ask me clarifying questions before writing the answer.”
**Before (what most people say in interviews):**
“Yeah, so there was this project that was behind schedule and I helped get it back on track.”
**After (STAR-formatted):**
“When our flagship product launch fell 3 weeks behind schedule due to a vendor delay, I stepped in to restructure the timeline. I broke the remaining deliverables into 2-day sprints, reassigned 4 team members based on skill fit, and set up daily 15-minute standups. We launched 2 days ahead of the revised deadline and hit 140% of our first-month revenue target. It taught me that constraint often drives better execution than comfort.”
## Prompt 7: The Salary Research and Negotiation Script
This is the prompt most job seekers never think to use — but it can be worth thousands of dollars. It generates a counter-offer script anchored in market data rather than personal need.
**Copy this prompt:**
> “I’ve received a job offer for [ROLE] at [COMPANY] in [CITY]. The offered salary is $[AMOUNT]. Based on current market data:
> 1. What is the typical salary range for this role in this location? (Use Glassdoor, Levels.fyi, Payscale, and BLS data as references)
> 2. Write a counter-offer email requesting $[TARGET AMOUNT]. The tone should be grateful and excited about the role, but confident. Anchor the ask on market data, not personal expenses. Keep it under 150 words.
> 3. Give me 3 backup negotiation points if they can’t meet the salary (signing bonus, extra PTO, remote flexibility, professional development budget).”
**Why this matters:** Research shows that candidates who negotiate receive an average of 7-15% more than the initial offer. Over a career, that compounds into hundreds of thousands of dollars. Yet most people accept the first number because they don’t know how to ask — or they’re afraid of losing the offer. A well-crafted, data-anchored counter-offer almost never results in a rescinded offer.
## These 7 Prompts Are Just the Start
The prompts above cover the core job search workflow: analyze the gap, fix your resume, write a cover letter, optimize LinkedIn, prepare for interviews, and negotiate your salary.
But a complete job search has dozens more scenarios — cold outreach to hiring managers, follow-up emails after interviews, career change positioning, referral request messages, thank-you notes, and strategies for finding jobs that are never posted publicly.
That’s exactly why we built the **[JobToolKitAI]— a downloadable toolkit with **125+ tested AI prompts**, 100+ ATS-ready resume templates, interview simulation guides, salary negotiation scripts, and a hidden job market strategy. Everything in one place, for a one-time payment.
**[Check your ATS score for free →
Or **[get the full toolkit for $39 → and stop guessing your way through the job search.
—
## Frequently Asked Questions
### Can AI really help me write a better resume?
Yes — but only if you use structured, specific prompts. Vague requests like “write me a resume” produce generic output that won’t pass ATS filters. The key is feeding the AI both your experience and the specific job description, then giving it clear instructions on format and focus.
### Will recruiters know my resume was written by AI?
They can if you copy-paste raw AI output without editing. The best approach is to use AI as a drafting partner: let it generate the structure and keyword optimization, then review every line to add your authentic voice, verify accuracy, and adjust metrics to reflect your real experience.
### How many keywords from the job description should I include in my resume?
Aim for 10-15 relevant keywords naturally integrated throughout your resume. Focus on skills, tools, certifications, and action verbs that appear repeatedly in the job posting — those signal the employer’s highest priorities.
### Should I tailor my resume for every single application?
Ideally, yes. Tailored resumes receive significantly more interview callbacks than generic ones. But you don’t need to rewrite from scratch each time. Start with a strong base resume, then use the ATS Keyword Gap Finder prompt to adjust your summary, skills section, and 3-5 key bullet points for each application.
### Is ChatGPT or Claude better for resume prompts?
Both work well with structured prompts. The quality of the output depends more on your prompt than the specific AI tool. That said, Claude tends to follow complex, multi-step instructions more precisely, while ChatGPT is widely accessible. Use whichever you’re comfortable with — the prompts in this guide work on both.