Be the Name They Remember
After the Interview
This workshop teaches you how to define what you want to stand for professionally, how to say it the same way across your LinkedIn, your resume, and in person, and how to build a digital presence using only free tools.
Why your resume isn't getting calls
These are the 4 most common mistakes we see in student resumes — and all of them are fixable.
Blending Into the Crowd
Thousands of freshers apply with the same templates. A clear brand identity makes you unforgettable to hiring managers.
Disjointed Online Presence
When your resume says one thing, LinkedIn says another, and you speak a third way, recruiters lose trust. We fix that.
Fear of Self-Promotion
Most students feel self-promotion is fake or bragging. We teach a simple storytelling framework that feels natural.
No Digital Proof
If your work exists only on your local machine, it doesn't build trust. We'll show you how to host and present work for free.
A hands-on 2-hour roadmap
No fluff. Every minute is structured around practical action you can take immediately.
Branding Fundamentals for Freshers
- What personal branding means for a college student — and why it is simpler than it sounds
- The first impression you make online before anyone meets you in person
- How to define what you want to be known for — even if you are still figuring out your career
Your Positioning Statement
- Finding your one clear positioning statement: who you are, what you do, and who you help
- How consistency across your profiles, your bio, and your communication builds trust over time
Storytelling & AI Scaffolding
- Using AI to discover and articulate your own strengths in professional language
- The difference between self-promotion that feels fake and storytelling that feels real
- How to talk about yourself in a WhatsApp message, a LinkedIn post, and an interview the same way
Setup & Accountability
- Building a simple digital presence using only free tools that takes one afternoon to set up
- What a strong personal brand does for you over the next 12 months — with real student examples
Same person. Totally different resume.
Click any bullet to see what a recruiter sees — and what you can write instead.
Rewrite this resume bullet using strong action verbs, specific metrics, and
concrete outcomes. Target role: [Job Title]
Original: "Computer science engineering student."
Keep it under 20 words. Use past tense. Start with a strong verb.
What past participants are saying
"Crafting a clean personal brand changed how I talk in interviews. I felt confident explaining my background."
"The positioning template helped me explain my transition from chemical engineering to tech in under a minute."
"Highly recommend. It teaches you how to present yourself as a professional rather than just another applicant."
Common questions
Your resume can get you interviews.
Join 40 students on Saturday, August 22, 2026 and leave with a resume that finally works for you.
Reserve My Seat — Free