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GPT-5, Claude 3.7 Sonnet, Gemini 2.5 Pro, or any strong model that can compare documents, reason about hiring signals, and rewrite bullet points with concrete impact.You find a role you actually want, but the job description is dense and your resume is a rough all-purpose version. Before you apply, you want to know which requirements matter most, where your evidence is thin, and which edits will make the strongest difference in one pass.Career

Ce Prompt compare votre CV à l’offre d’emploi avant votre candidature

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Ce Prompt compare votre CV à l’offre d’emploi avant votre candidature

Why this prompt matters

Most applicants lose interviews before a human conversation starts. Not because they are unqualified, but because their resume hides relevant work, misses obvious hiring signals, or over-focuses on the wrong experience. A structured Prompt reduces that waste by turning a vague editing task into a targeted rewrite based on how screening actually works.

What we use it for

You find a role you actually want, but the job description is dense and your resume is a rough all-purpose version. Before you apply, you want to know which requirements matter most, where your evidence is thin, and which edits will make the strongest difference in one pass.

Prompt

Role: Act as a senior recruiter and career coach who reviews resumes against job descriptions, identifies hiring-risk gaps, and rewrites weak experience bullets into sharper evidence of fit.

Context: I am applying for a role and I need more than generic resume feedback. I want a structured comparison between my resume and the target job description so I can see where I look strong, where I look weak, what evidence is missing, and which edits will most improve my chances. The goal is not to flatter me. The goal is to think like a skeptical recruiter who has to screen dozens of candidates quickly.

Task: Compare my resume to the target job description. Identify the role's must-have requirements, nice-to-have signals, and likely screening criteria. Then evaluate how well my current resume matches those requirements. Flag missing experience, unclear phrasing, weak bullets, missing metrics, and places where my wording hides relevant experience. Rewrite the weakest bullet points so they are sharper, more credible, and more aligned with the role. If a gap cannot be fixed honestly, say so and suggest the safest workaround in the application, portfolio, or cover letter.

Constraints:
- Do not invent experience, tools, degrees, certifications, metrics, or achievements that are not supported by my input.
- Separate true qualification gaps from presentation problems.
- Prioritize the fixes that would matter most in an initial recruiter screen.
- Keep important terms in English when they are standard hiring or technical language, such as API, SQL, Python, SaaS, KPI, OKR, and Prompt.
- If the job description is unrealistic or overloaded, say which requirements are likely flexible versus essential.
- When rewriting bullets, keep them believable and concise.
- Point out ATS keyword issues, but do not turn the resume into unreadable keyword stuffing.

Output Format:
1. Role summary in 3 to 5 bullet points
2. Top screening criteria the recruiter will probably use
3. Match score from 0 to 100 with a short explanation
4. Strengths already visible in the resume
5. Real gaps that could block an interview
6. Presentation problems that make the resume look weaker than it is
7. Rewritten bullet points for the most important weak sections
8. Missing keywords or evidence to add carefully
9. Tailored application strategy for this specific role
10. Red flags or claims I should avoid making

Inputs:
- Job title: [TARGET ROLE]
- Company type: [STARTUP / ENTERPRISE / AGENCY / PUBLIC SECTOR / OTHER]
- Job description: [PASTE FULL JOB DESCRIPTION]
- My current resume: [PASTE RESUME TEXT]
- Seniority level: [ENTRY / MID / SENIOR / STAFF / EXECUTIVE]
- Roles I most want to emphasize: [LIST]
- Areas where I feel weak: [LIST]
- Country or market: [LOCATION]
- Any strict constraints: [NO DEGREE / CAREER GAP / INDUSTRY SWITCH / ETC.]

Result

1. Role summary - The role is a senior product analyst position in a B2B SaaS company focused on self-serve growth and lifecycle retention. - The employer wants someone who can work across SQL, experimentation, stakeholder communication, and dashboard design. - The description strongly suggests they value business judgment as much as technical analysis. - Experience partnering with product managers and marketing appears to matter more than pure BI reporting depth.

2. Top screening criteria the recruiter will probably use First, whether the candidate has clear evidence of ownership over product or growth analytics rather than generic reporting support. Second, whether they can show strong SQL and experimentation experience in a SaaS environment. Third, whether the resume proves business impact with metrics instead of task lists. Fourth, whether cross-functional communication is visible, especially with product, engineering, and go-to-market teams.

3. Match score 78/100. The resume shows strong analytics fundamentals, dashboard ownership, and stakeholder exposure, but it undersells experimentation work and does not clearly connect analysis to revenue or retention outcomes. The candidate looks plausible for interview, but not yet obvious.

4. Strengths already visible in the resume The candidate has four years of analytics experience, clear SQL usage, ownership of recurring executive reporting, and evidence of collaboration with product managers. The migration project bullet also signals comfort with messy systems and operational work.

5. Real gaps that could block an interview There is no direct mention of A/B testing design, retention analysis, or lifecycle funnel ownership, even though the job description emphasizes all three. Python appears only once and without context, which makes technical depth hard to judge.

6. Presentation problems Several bullets describe activity rather than outcome. Phrases like “supported dashboards” and “helped improve reporting” are too weak for a senior role. Important SaaS metrics such as activation, conversion, churn, or expansion are absent.

7. Rewritten bullet points - Replaced “Supported weekly dashboards for product leadership” with “Owned weekly product-performance dashboards used by leadership to track activation, retention, and conversion trends across the self-serve funnel.” - Replaced “Helped marketing with campaign reporting” with “Partnered with lifecycle marketing to analyze campaign performance, identify drop-off points, and inform retention experiments tied to reactivation goals.” - Replaced “Worked on data migration project” with “Led analytics validation during a cross-system data migration, reducing reporting discrepancies and restoring stakeholder trust in core KPI reporting.”

8. Missing keywords or evidence to add carefully Add any truthful experience tied to experimentation, cohort analysis, retention, funnel analysis, lifecycle metrics, and product decision support. If you used Python for notebook analysis or automation, say how.

9. Tailored application strategy Lead with product analytics, not general BI work. Move any experiment-related example higher on the page. If you do not have formal A/B ownership, use a cover letter or application note to show adjacent evidence such as hypothesis testing, funnel diagnosis, or post-launch measurement.

10. Red flags to avoid Do not imply ownership of experimentation programs if you only consumed results. Do not add growth metrics you cannot defend in an interview. Avoid stuffing the resume with every keyword from the posting if the underlying evidence is weak.

La plupart des candidats n’ont pas besoin d’une nouvelle relecture générique de leur CV. Ils ont surtout besoin d’un moyen plus rapide de voir comment une offre d’emploi précise va juger leur candidature avant même qu’un Recruiter n’arrive à l’étape du premier échange.

C’est exactement pour cela que ce Prompt a été conçu. Il force le modèle à raisonner à la fois comme un Recruiter et comme un coach de carrière, puis à distinguer les vraies lacunes de qualification des simples problèmes de formulation. Cette différence compte. Ne pas avoir une compétence n’est pas la même chose qu’un bullet point mal rédigé, et les deux problèmes ne se corrigent pas de la même manière.

La structure est volontaire. Le Role place le modèle dans la posture d’un évaluateur sceptique, pas d’un assistant qui vous encourage sans recul. Le Context précise qu’il s’agit d’un poste précis, pas d’un conseil de carrière généraliste. Le Task demande les critères de sélection, l’analyse d’adéquation, la réécriture des bullet points faibles et une stratégie de candidature concrète. Les Constraints font le travail le plus important : elles empêchent le modèle d’inventer des réalisations, de fausses métriques ou du keyword stuffing malhonnête juste pour embellir le CV.

Le format de sortie rend aussi ce Prompt plus utile qu’une simple réécriture. Au lieu de livrer un CV corrigé et de s’arrêter là, il explique la logique probable du tri initial, attribue un score d’adéquation avec justification, identifie les vrais blocages et réécrit d’abord les sections les plus faibles. Le lecteur peut ainsi concentrer son temps là où l’impact est réel, plutôt que sur des détails à faible valeur.

L’exemple montre le type de diagnostic dont les bons candidats ont vraiment besoin. Il ne se contente pas de dire « adaptez votre CV ». Il explique quels signaux un Recruiter regardera probablement, comment paraître plus solide sans exagérer, et où une expérience proche peut être repositionnée honnêtement. C’est particulièrement utile pour les reconversions, les candidatures vers un poste ambitieux ou les profils dont l’expérience est meilleure que leur formulation actuelle ne le laisse penser.

Si vous postulez de manière sélective au lieu d’envoyer partout le même CV, ce Prompt mérite d’être conservé. Il transforme l’édition du CV en processus de décision plus précis et peut vous aider à repérer des faiblesses avant que le tunnel de recrutement ne le fasse à votre place.

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