Build a Resume That
Opens Doors With AI
Most student resumes have the same sections, the same mistakes, and the same invisible bullet points. In this workshop you will learn what recruiters actually look at, which outdated sections to delete forever, and how to use AI to rewrite your experience in language that gets noticed.
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.
You list duties, not impact
Hiring managers don't care what you were responsible for. They want to know what you delivered. Most resumes read like job descriptions — not achievements.
Wrong sections for 2026
Objective statements, GPA without context, and irrelevant coursework are resume killers. What worked 5 years ago gets you rejected today.
Not optimised for ATS
75% of resumes are filtered before a human sees them. Without the right keywords and structure, your resume is invisible to the job you actually want.
Weak action language
Starting bullet points with 'Helped', 'Assisted', or 'Was involved in' signals junior thinking. Strong resumes use specific, confident action verbs.
A hands-on 2-hour roadmap
No fluff. Every minute is structured around practical action you can take immediately.
Inside the Recruiter's Brain
- What a resume actually is in 2026 — and why most students have it completely wrong
- The 7 things every recruiter looks for in the first 10 seconds of reading a resume
- The sections that must be on every fresher resume — in the exact order they should appear
The Clean-Up
- What to permanently remove from your resume — the outdated elements that make you look behind
- How to describe your college projects and internships so they sound like real professional work
Impact & AI Writing
- Writing resume bullet points that show impact, not just activity — with and without prior experience
- Using ChatGPT to rewrite a weak bullet point into a strong one — live demonstration
- How to check whether your resume will pass an automated screening system using free AI tools
Refinement & Layout
- The one-page rule — why it matters, when to break it, and how to make every line earn its place
- Your action step: leave this session with at least one fully rewritten section of your resume
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: "Responsible for social media content creation"
Keep it under 20 words. Use past tense. Start with a strong verb.
What past participants are saying
"I rewrote my resume in the workshop. Got 2 interview calls the same week I updated my LinkedIn."
"The AI prompt framework alone was worth 10x the ticket price. My resume finally sounds like a professional's."
"I'd been applying for 3 months with zero responses. After this workshop, I had 4 callbacks in one week."
Common questions
Your resume can get you interviews.
Join 40 students on Saturday, July 25, 2026 and leave with a resume that finally works for you.
Reserve My Seat — Free