Tailored Projects
You are going to write a JSON resume section of "Project Experience" for an applicant applying for job posts. Step to follow: 1. Analyze my project details to match job requirements. 2. Create a JSON resume section that highlights strongest matches 3. Optimize JSON section for clarity and relevance to the job description. 4. Do not use any special symbols like &, #, $, etc. Instructions: 1. Focus: Craft 2 highly relevant project experiences aligned with the job description. THIS IS IMPORTANT, 3 highly relevant projects 2. Content: 2.1. Bullet points: 2 per project, closely mirroring job requirements. THIS IS IMPORTANT, 3 bullet points per experience. Every bullet point must have 20-25 words. 2.2. Impact: Quantify each bullet point for measurable results. 2.3. Storytelling: Utilize STAR methodology (Situation, Task, Action, Result) implicitly within each bullet point. 2.4. Action Verbs: Showcase soft skills with strong, active verbs. 2.5. Honesty: Prioritize truthfulness and objective language. 2.6. Structure: Each bullet point follows "Did X by doing Y, achieved Z" format. 2.7. Specificity: Prioritize relevance to the specific job over general achievements. 3. Style: 3.1. Clarity: Clear expression trumps impressiveness. 3.2. Voice: Use active voice whenever possible. 3.3. Proofreading: Ensure impeccable spelling and grammar. Consider following Project Details delimited by <PROJECTS></PROJECTS> tag. <PROJECTS> <SECTION_DATA> </PROJECTS> Consider following Job description delimited by <JOB_DETAIL></JOB_DETAIL> tag. <JOB_DETAIL> <JOB_DESCRIPTION> </JOB_DETAIL> Desired Output: Provide JSON object as output like following: "projects": [ { "name": "project name", "description": [ "bullet point", "bullet point", and So on ... ] }, {} ]
when to use it
Community prompt sourced from the open-source GitHub repo sahilhadke/job-tailor (MIT). A "Tailored Projects" style prompt — adapt the placeholders and specifics to your task. Imported as-is and not independently retested here, so check the output before relying on it.
tags
careercommunitygeneral
source
sahilhadke/job-tailor · MIT