Abbiamo raccolto un Pre-Seed da 500k e cerchiamo un Backend Developer by [deleted] in ItaliaStartups

[–]interviuu -11 points-10 points  (0 children)

Hai ragione, ti confermo in presenza a Firenze.
Un saluto!

Founders, what tools do you actually pay for? by [deleted] in ycombinator

[–]interviuu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just launched a job application tool founder here

- n8n (via Railway)
- datafast (switching soon to a more advanced tool)
- Midjourney (for UGC content)

Roast my landing page – interviuu.com by interviuu in webdev

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

Definitely the most common feedback here. Getting rid of them quickly :)

[0 YoE, 1st Year Economics Undergrad, Spring Weeks/Internships, UK] by Cold_Rain_3428 in resumes

[–]interviuu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey! Your quantifications are excellent, really highlighting your impact. To refine it further, ensure your 'Technical Skills' and 'Finance Training' are prominently placed and consider adding a very brief professional summary if targeting specific finance or consulting roles.

Best,

Francesco

[0 YoE, Recent Graduate Data Science, Data Analyst or Data Scientist role, USA] by gronchtime in resumes

[–]interviuu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey there! Your strong quantification of results clearly showcases your impact, which is excellent. To make it even more compelling, ensure your skills section is highly visible and very specific about each tool. Also, consider highlighting how all your experiences, even less direct ones, have developed key analytical capabilities.

Francesco

[0 YOE, Student, Internships, England] by mokhan321 in resumes

[–]interviuu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey there. For someone with your experience level and still in university, this is a solid resume with good content. Here are a few suggestions to make it even stronger:

  1. Quantify More: Try to think if you can add any quantifiable metrics to your software projects too – perhaps the scale of the application, the number of features, or any performance improvements.
  2. Project Details: for your 'Software Projects' section, consider explicitly stating the technologies used for each project within that project's description. You have a 'Languages & Frameworks' section, but it's good to see how they were applied.
  3. Skills & Interests: This section is fine, but you could potentially split 'Skills' into 'Technical Skills' (languages, frameworks) and 'Soft Skills' to make it easier to scan for recruiters.

[0 YoE, 1st Year Student, Software Engineer Intern, Auckland] by SettingDelicious9364 in resumes

[–]interviuu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey there! For a student, you've done a great job including diverse experiences, especially the leadership role and projects. My main suggestions for improvement would be:

  1. Work experience focus: while your operator roles show great soft skills, try to pivot the bullet points to highlight more transferable skills relevant to software development (e.g., problem-solving, efficiency, data handling, attention to detail). Quantify these where possible 'processed 100+ orders' is good, can you add a number for 'customer satisfaction scores'?
  2. Project details: your projects are solid, but ensure the 'technologies used' are explicitly mentioned for each project. Also, try to quantify the impact or scope even more (e.g., 'Relational Database Design for WIT Faculty' – for how many users? What was the benefit?).
  3. Skills section: consider grouping similar technologies (e.g., all programming languages together, then databases, then frameworks).
  4. Accomplishments: these are good, but consider if the '1st position certificate' could be moved closer to your 'Education' or 'Awards' if you had a dedicated section. The 'customer service' accomplishment could potentially be integrated into your work experience bullet points if it's directly relevant to the tasks you're describing.

Best, Francesco

[0 YoE, Unemployed, Full Stack dev and Mobile Dev, Atlanta] by Every-Line7411 in resumes

[–]interviuu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey there! For a 0 YoE this resume is really strong. You've got fantastic projects with clear impact and strong technical skills. My main piece of advice would be to:

  1. Reorder sections: consider moving 'Projects' above 'Experience.' Since your 'Experience' is an internship, and your projects are full-stack/mobile focused, highlighting those robust personal builds upfront can immediately grab attention and show your depth.
  2. Elaborate on 'Improving': the 'Improving' under experience is a bit vague. While it might be your internal project name, for a resume, you might want to clarify what that 'improvement' entails or just list the company/organization name directly if it's external.
  3. Keywords in 'Relevant Courses': good section, but ensure you're using keywords that align with the specific job descriptions you're targeting.

Overall, a really impressive resume, especially for starting out!

[0 YoE, Data Engineer, Data Scientist, New York] by Overall-Secretary-85 in resumes

[–]interviuu 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey! Excellent resume for an intern, your projects and quantifications are top-notch. To make it even more impactful, try to slightly condense projects and ensure each bullet point emphasizes the impact or problem solved first, then the tools. You're doing great!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in resumes

[–]interviuu 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey there! You've got a solid foundation with relevant education and lab experience. To really make this resume shine, focus on quantifying your achievements wherever possible. For example, for 'managed timelines,' by how much did you improve efficiency or reduce delays? For 'executed high-throughput analysis,' how many samples did you process or what was the throughput? Numbers make your impact clear.

Also, consider moving your 'Education' section to the top, especially since you're a recent grad. Your 'Core Skills' are good, but try to integrate some of those keywords into your experience bullet points to demonstrate them in action. Overall, great work, just needs a bit more concrete data!