Launched this week

ATSFixer
AI resume optimizer that beats ATS bots & lands interviews
2 followers
AI resume optimizer that beats ATS bots & lands interviews
2 followers
75% of resumes never reach a human — ATS bots reject them. ATSFixer reverse-engineers those bots, fills keyword gaps in your own voice, and delivers a complete interview kit in 30 seconds. Every upload includes: ATS score (±3 pts accuracy), AI resume rewrite, tailored cover letter, follow-up email + LinkedIn DM, ATS-safe PDF, and a built-in job tracker.




Hey Product Hunt! 👋
The idea for ATSFixer came from a frustrating pattern I kept seeing: talented people — strong resumes, real experience —> getting ghosted by companies they were perfectly qualified for. Not because they weren't good enough. Because a bot never showed their resume to a human.
Over 98% of Fortune 500 companies run every application through ATS software first. If your resume doesn't contain the exact keywords — formatted exactly right — it's auto-rejected before any person reads it. That felt deeply unfair, and solvable.
What started as a keyword checker evolved into something much more complete: a 4-pass AI rewriter that adapts (not rewrites) your resume in your own voice, generates a tailored cover letter, writes your follow-up sequence, and tracks every application automatically.
The "sounds like you" constraint was the hardest engineering problem. Generic AI rewrites were obvious and killed candidates' credibility with recruiters. We solved it by using each person's own sentence patterns as the template, filling gaps without replacing the voice.
10,000+ resumes later, the avg score boost is +31 pts — and users are landing interviews at Google, Meta, Stripe, and Apple.
Happy to answer anything — what questions do you have? 🚀
https://atsfixer.com/
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@jadmarko The voice-preservation angle is really smart—that's where most AI resume tools fall apart and accidentally tank credibility with hiring managers. The constraint of using someone's own sentence patterns as a template is a much harder problem to solve than generic keyword stuffing, and it sounds like you nailed it.