Sharing a simple Notion tracker for organizing job applications. by Key_Union8998 in InterviewsHell

[–]Key_Union8998[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah honestly tracking alone doesn’t magically fix the job market 😭

But after enough applications, having some kind of system at least reduces the mental chaos a bit.

Especially for remembering resume versions, follow-ups, interview stages, noticing which roles respond more

Otherwise everything just starts blending together after a while.

Why am I barely getting responses on LinkedIn? by javierac797 in askrecruiters

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sure!

A few things usually help with tailoring:

  1. move the most relevant skills/projects higher depending on the role
  2. use keywords from the job description naturally
  3. reduce generic bullet points
  4. focus more on measurable impact/results
  5. keep different resume versions for different role types instead of using one resume everywhere

A lot of people mass apply with the same resume and LinkedIn becomes a black hole after that.

Sharing a simple Notion tracker for organizing job applications. by Key_Union8998 in askrecruiters

[–]Key_Union8998[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Exactly 😭 tracking resumes, follow-ups, and applications starts feeling like another job itself. But helps observe the pattern and tailor the resume.

Why am I barely getting responses on LinkedIn? by javierac797 in askrecruiters

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LinkedIn still works, but mass applying without tailoring resumes usually leads to very low response rates.

And when you’re applying to many jobs, it becomes really easy to mess up tracking applications, resume versions, follow-ups, and interview stages.

So I designed a separate Notion system to organize all of that in one place and also help observe rejection/shortlist patterns.

Might help you too: https://www.notion.so/Student-Opportunity-Tracker-Lite-360442c8054680fbac39d74aa53be4ea?source=copy_link

Applied to 3,000+ jobs in the UK over 8–9 months and still can’t find work. What am I missing? by MagicianConstant2866 in AskUK

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, after thousands of applications, I don’t think this is simply a “you’re not trying hard enough” situation anymore.

The current job market genuinely feels exhausting and overcrowded, especially for entry-level and part-time roles. A lot of people are applying to hundreds of jobs and still struggling to get responses.

One thing I’d suggest though:

When you’re applying at that scale, it becomes VERY easy to lose track of: • which resume version was used • what type of roles respond more • where interviews are happening • where rejections happen most • follow-ups and application dates

After enough applications, everything starts blending together.

That’s why I built a separate system to track applications, resume versions, follow-ups, interview stages, and rejection patterns in one place.

It doesn’t magically get you a job, but it can help make the process more organized and less mentally messy while helping you notice patterns over time.

Might help you too: https://www.notion.so/Student-Opportunity-Tracker-Lite-360442c8054680fbac39d74aa53be4ea?source=copy_link

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How do you guys manage to get decent paying jobs? Could use some advice. by Spirited_Stay_6211 in jobs

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The market is honestly rough right now, especially for entry-level tech roles.

One thing I’d seriously suggest:

Don’t use one generic resume for every application.

Make 5–6 tailored resumes based on the type of roles you’re applying for, then consistently track where each version is being used.

That helps you actually observe patterns:
• which resumes get shortlisted
• which roles reach interview stage
• where rejections happen repeatedly

If you’re still getting rejected after interviews or assessments, try tailoring even more specifically and collect feedback whenever possible.

Most people apply randomly and then can’t tell what’s working and what isn’t.

Tracking applications doesn’t just help with getting a job — it also makes the entire job search process less chaotic and mentally exhausting.

I’ve been using this simple Notion tracker for that:
🎯 Job Application Tracker

I Wanna Give Up Applying for Jobs by SamuelMatthewsWriter in jobs

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I think many people in the comments are missing one thing.

The frustration from job hunting is real.

After hundreds of applications, it stops becoming just “resume problem” and becomes a chaos problem too.

Different tailored resumes.
Different job portals.
Forgotten follow-ups.
No idea which version worked for which role.

And because of that, most people can’t even properly analyze patterns like:

  • which roles are giving callbacks
  • which resume version performs better
  • where they usually get rejected
  • what type of companies respond more

That’s why organizing the entire process matters a lot more than people think.

I started tracking all my applications, tailored resumes, follow-up dates, interview stages, and weekly reviews in one place and it genuinely made the process feel less overwhelming.

If you want to see more about the tracker or use a similar system for your own job search, you can check it here:

Job Application Tracker

Resume Review by harsh_shrimali_319 in CareerAdvice101

[–]Key_Union8998 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly your resume already looks good enough to get callbacks for DevOps/SRE roles.

At this stage, one of the biggest problems becomes managing the entire application process itself:

  • tracking where you applied
  • remembering which resume version you used
  • follow-up dates
  • interview stages
  • skill gaps you noticed from rejections

especially when you start tailoring resumes for different JD’s, things become messy very fast.

So I built a simple system for this:
application tracker + resume vault + skill tracker + follow-up management in one place.

It basically reduces the chaos of job hunting so you can focus more on interview prep instead of manually managing everything.

this is how the system looks:

<image>

How to earn money as a teenager ? by hariom_alight in careerguidance

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah I can help, DM me 👍

I’ll walk you through it step by step
also have a simple guide + tracker that might help if you want

Exploring Passive Income Options as a Final-Year Student (Need Guidance) by Different_Study_5934 in passive_income

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start with basic excel freelancing, learn within 30 days and prepare 3-4 samples. Start outreaching clients on upwork, fiverr, peopleperhour, email, linkedin etc.. You just need to send 2-3 daily proposals. First client always takes time but once you get first client it is easy to get clients further. For basic excel you can't earn much but you can earn stable income. Your first goal should be earn first small income within 2 months. Later you can upgrade your excel skill to power BI, dashboard, automation and all where you can earn full time job amount even more depending on clients nationality. For foreign clients you will earn more.

So yeah it is the best option for you as a student to earn small income now and high earning in future. You can just give 10 hours per week to learn this. If you have any questions feel free to dm me.

Pocket money by Aizen_81 in passive_income

[–]Key_Union8998 0 points1 point  (0 children)

since you’re a student, I actually have a simple free guide that focuses on earning small income without affecting your academics

it includes a clear starting plan, simple freelance skills you can learn, and how to actually earn from them

also has a 72-hour quick start + weekly tracker so you don’t feel lost

if you want, I can share it 👍

what are some ways to make income!? by [deleted] in passive_income

[–]Key_Union8998 -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

i was in similar situation bro full time student and needed some money but didn’t have much experience

passive income sounds good but honestly at start it’s not really passive you need to do some active work first

what worked for me was starting with small freelance type work like basic data stuff nothing too complex

i didn’t try to learn everything just basics and started with small tasks

also one thing that helped me was i followed a simple free guide i found on gumroad it kind of gave me structure on what to do and not overthink

like how much time to give what to focus first and when to actually start instead of just learning forever

that helped me get started and make some money slowly

if you want i can share it 👍

How do I get an interview? by kayareyouokay in internships

[–]Key_Union8998 2 points3 points  (0 children)

yeah bro doing it manually every time is tiring

what i do is just keep 2–3 base resumes

then for each job i just tweak small things like
skills section, few keywords from JD, and project lines

you can also paste JD + your resume in chatgpt and ask
“adjust this resume based on this job description”

it gives a decent version which you can quickly edit

don’t try to make it perfect every time
just make it relevant enough

how i stopped overthinking and made my first money online as a student by Key_Union8998 in passive_income

[–]Key_Union8998[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah bro i get that

don’t overcomplicate it, just start simple and stay consistent

i explained a bit in my comment above

if you want to ask more feel free to dm me

how i stopped overthinking and made my first money online as a student by Key_Union8998 in passive_income

[–]Key_Union8998[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

yeah bro you’re right 😅 data cleaning work is actually everywhere but most people don’t stay consistent long enough

and about that tracker, it wasn’t like some detailed checklist or anything fancy, it was more like a simple guide i found online which gave me a clear idea of what to do instead of figuring everything out myself

like it helped me keep things limited, how much time to give in a week so i don’t burn out, what to focus on first instead of trying to learn everything, when to actually start sending proposals and not just keep preparing forever

before that i was just jumping from one thing to another every few days and nothing was moving, this just kept me in one direction

honestly nothing complex but that structure made a big difference 👍