JOB SEARCH

50 ChatGPT Prompts for Your Resume & Job Search (Copy-Paste Ready)

Updated March 2026 Β· 18 min read Β· By Michael

AI won't get you hired β€” but it can help you write a better resume, craft targeted cover letters, and walk into interviews more prepared than 95% of candidates. Here are 50 prompts I actually use and recommend.

πŸ“‹ What's in this guide

I've helped dozens of job seekers use AI to speed up their search. The difference between someone who gets results and someone who gets generic garbage? The quality of the prompt.

A bad prompt gives you text that sounds like it was written by a robot. A good prompt gives you a polished draft that sounds like you β€” just the best version of you.

Every prompt below is copy-paste ready. Replace the [bracketed text] with your information and you're good to go.

Resume Writing Prompts (1-15)

1. Rewrite a bullet point with impact

Prompt: "Rewrite this resume bullet point to focus on measurable results and use strong action verbs: [paste your current bullet point]. My role was [job title] at a [company type]."

2. Tailor your resume for a specific job

Prompt: "Here's my resume: [paste resume]. Here's the job description I'm applying for: [paste job description]. Rewrite my resume summary and top 3 bullet points to better align with this role. Keep it honest β€” don't fabricate experience."

3. Write a professional summary from scratch

Prompt: "Write a 3-sentence professional summary for my resume. I'm a [job title] with [X years] of experience in [industry]. My key strengths are [strength 1, strength 2, strength 3]. I'm targeting roles in [target role/industry]. Make it confident but not arrogant."

4. Translate job duties into achievements

Prompt: "I was responsible for [list of duties] at my job as a [title]. Turn each duty into an achievement-focused bullet point. Use the format: 'Action verb + what you did + result/impact.' If I don't have exact numbers, suggest realistic placeholders I can fill in."

5. Optimize for ATS (applicant tracking systems)

Prompt: "Compare my resume [paste resume] against this job posting [paste job posting]. List the keywords from the job posting that are missing from my resume. Suggest where and how to naturally incorporate them."
πŸ’‘ Pro tip: ATS systems scan for exact keyword matches. If the job posting says "project management" and your resume says "managed projects," you might not get flagged as a match. ChatGPT is excellent at catching these gaps.

6. Quantify vague experience

Prompt: "I [describe what you did in general terms] but I don't have exact metrics. Help me estimate reasonable, honest numbers I could use, or rephrase this to sound impactful without specific metrics. Industry: [your industry]."

7. Write a resume for a career change

Prompt: "I'm switching from [current field] to [target field]. My experience includes [list relevant transferable skills and experience]. Write a professional summary and 5 bullet points that reframe my background for [target field] roles."

8. Condense a long resume to one page

Prompt: "Here's my 2-page resume: [paste resume]. Help me cut it to 1 page while keeping the strongest content. I'm targeting [target role]. Tell me what to cut and what to keep, then rewrite the condensed version."

9. Fix a gap in your work history

Prompt: "I have a [length] gap in my resume from [date] to [date]. During that time I [what you actually did β€” caregiving, freelancing, health, learning, etc.]. How should I address this on my resume and in interviews? Give me honest, professional language."

10. Create a skills section that matches the job

Prompt: "Based on this job description: [paste job description], create a skills section for my resume. I actually have experience with: [list your real skills]. Organize them into 'Technical Skills' and 'Soft Skills.' Only include skills I genuinely have."

11-15. More resume prompts

11. "Write 3 different versions of this bullet point at different seniority levels (entry, mid, senior): [bullet point]"

12. "Proofread my resume for grammar, consistency, tense issues, and formatting problems: [paste resume]"

13. "I have no professional experience yet. I'm a recent graduate with a degree in [field]. My relevant experience includes [coursework, internships, projects, volunteer work]. Write a resume that makes the most of what I have."

14. "Rewrite my resume to emphasize leadership experience. Here are my roles: [paste roles]"

15. "Create a 'Projects' section for my resume based on these things I've built or worked on: [describe projects]"

Cover Letter Prompts (16-25)

16. Write a cover letter from scratch

Prompt: "Write a cover letter for the position of [job title] at [company]. Here's the job description: [paste JD]. Here's my relevant experience: [brief summary]. Why I'm interested in this company: [your reason]. Tone: professional but personable. No clichΓ©s like 'I am writing to express my interest.' Keep it under 300 words."

17. Open with a hook instead of a boring intro

Prompt: "Write 5 different opening sentences for a cover letter to [company] for a [role] position. Avoid generic openings. Make the reader want to keep reading. My background: [1-sentence summary]."

18. Personalize for a specific company

Prompt: "I'm applying to [company]. Here's what I know about them: [paste from their about page, recent news, or values]. Help me write a paragraph showing I've done my research and explaining why I want to work there specifically β€” not just any company in this space."

19-25. More cover letter prompts

19. "Rewrite this cover letter to sound more confident: [paste cover letter]"

20. "Write a short cover letter (150 words max) for a [role] at a startup. Tone: direct, no-BS."

21. "I'm applying via email and there's no formal cover letter required. Write a 4-sentence email body that works as a cover letter. Role: [title]."

22. "Write a cover letter that addresses the fact that I'm overqualified for this role but genuinely want it because [reason]."

23. "Write a referral cover letter. [Person's name] at [company] referred me for the [role] position."

24. "I'm applying for an internal transfer from [current dept] to [target dept]. Write a cover letter that acknowledges my current role while making a case for the switch."

25. "Write a cover letter for a freelance/contract position. I need to sell my skills without sounding desperate. My portfolio includes: [list work]"

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This article has 50 prompts. The full Get Hired Toolkit has 75+ prompts, 3 resume templates, 3 cover letter templates, and an interview prep cheat sheet with the STAR method breakdown.

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Interview Prep Prompts (26-38)

26. Practice common interview questions

Prompt: "Act as an interviewer for a [job title] position at a [company type]. Ask me the 10 most common interview questions one at a time. After I answer each one, give me feedback on how to improve my response. Be constructive but honest."

27. Prepare STAR method answers

Prompt: "Help me create a STAR method answer (Situation, Task, Action, Result) for this behavioral interview question: '[question]'. Here's the raw story: [describe what happened]. Make the result specific and quantifiable if possible."

28. Answer "Tell me about yourself"

Prompt: "Write a 60-second 'tell me about yourself' answer. I'm a [title] with [years] experience. My background: [brief history]. I'm interviewing for [target role]. Make it flow naturally β€” not a list of resume bullet points."

29. Handle the salary question

Prompt: "The interviewer asks 'What are your salary expectations?' I'm targeting [$X-$Y range] for a [role] in [city/remote]. Write 3 different responses: one that deflects, one that gives a range, and one that flips the question. Help me not leave money on the table."

30. Research a company before an interview

Prompt: "I have an interview at [company name] for a [role]. Based on what you know about this company, give me: (1) their main products/services, (2) recent news or milestones, (3) their culture and values, (4) 5 smart questions I could ask the interviewer that show I've done my homework."

31-38. More interview prompts

31. "What are the top 5 behavioral questions for a [role] and what answers are interviewers looking for?"

32. "Help me answer 'What's your biggest weakness?' in a way that's honest but not disqualifying. My real weakness: [describe it]"

33. "I have a technical interview for a [role]. What topics should I study and what questions should I expect?"

34. "Write a thank-you email to send after my interview for [role] at [company]. Mention something specific we discussed: [topic]"

35. "I bombed an interview question about [topic]. Help me write a follow-up email that addresses it without sounding desperate."

36. "Give me 10 smart questions to ask at the end of an interview for a [role]. Nothing generic β€” questions that make the interviewer think 'this person gets it.'"

37. "Help me prepare for a panel interview with [number] interviewers. Tips for managing multiple people, making eye contact, and addressing the group."

38. "I'm interviewing for a management position but I've never managed people. Help me frame my leadership experience from [describe situations]."

39. Create a job search plan

Prompt: "I'm a [title] looking for [type of role] in [location/remote]. I have [X hours per week] to dedicate to job searching. Create a weekly schedule and strategy that maximizes my chances. Include: where to search, how many applications per week, networking activities, and skill-building."

40. Identify target companies

Prompt: "I want to work in [industry] as a [role]. I prefer [company size, culture, location preferences]. Suggest 20 companies I should research and potentially apply to. For each one, tell me why it might be a good fit."

41-45. More job search prompts

41. "Help me decode this job posting: [paste job posting]. What are they really looking for? What are the red flags? Is this a senior or junior role in disguise?"

42. "I've applied to [X] jobs and haven't heard back. Help me audit my approach: [describe what you've been doing]"

43. "Write a cold email to a hiring manager at [company] for a [role] that hasn't been posted yet. I want to express interest without being annoying."

44. "I got a job offer at [$amount] for a [role]. Is this competitive? How should I negotiate? Here's my experience: [summary]"

45. "Write a professional email to decline a job offer gracefully. I'm turning it down because [reason] but want to keep the door open."

LinkedIn & Networking Prompts (46-50)

46. Rewrite your LinkedIn headline

Prompt: "Write 5 LinkedIn headline options for me. I'm a [title] who specializes in [skills/areas]. I want to attract recruiters looking for [target roles]. Avoid buzzwords like 'passionate' and 'guru.' Be specific."

47-50. More LinkedIn prompts

47. "Write a LinkedIn 'About' section for me. Background: [summary]. Make it conversational, not corporate. Include a clear statement of what I'm looking for."

48. "Write a LinkedIn connection request to [person's role] at [company]. I want to network, not ask for a job directly. Keep it under 200 characters."

49. "I just started a new job. Write a LinkedIn post announcing it that's genuine, not cringe. Include a thank-you to people who helped."

50. "Write a LinkedIn post sharing a lesson I learned during my job search: [the lesson]. Make it helpful for others, not self-congratulatory."

How to Get Better Results from ChatGPT

These prompts are a starting point. Here's how to get even better output:

  1. Give context. The more you tell ChatGPT about your background, the better the output. "Write a resume" β†’ bad. "Write a resume for a mid-level product manager transitioning from engineering" β†’ much better.
  2. Specify the tone. "Professional but warm" gives you a different result than "formal and corporate" or "casual and direct."
  3. Iterate. The first output is a draft, not a final product. Say "make it more concise," "add more numbers," or "this sounds too generic β€” make it specific to my experience."
  4. Don't lie. ChatGPT will help you present your experience in the best light, but fabricating experience or skills will backfire. Every interview tests whether you can actually do what your resume claims.
  5. Use it for the boring parts. ChatGPT is best at formatting, rephrasing, and optimizing. The content β€” your actual experience, stories, and personality β€” has to come from you.
⚠️ Important: Never submit ChatGPT output without editing it. Recruiters can spot AI-generated text, and an obviously AI-written resume signals laziness, not efficiency. Use these prompts to create a strong first draft, then make it yours.

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