Resumes & CVs
Building a resume or CV that lands interviews — using the free resume builder, what to put on it, and how it feeds your interview answers.
A resume gets you the interview; this cluster is about both halves of that — building one that actually earns the callback, and what happens to it after. The questions here are the ones candidates type at midnight: what to put on it, how to format it so the applicant-tracking system reads it before a human ever does, and whether a "free" resume builder can be trusted with the one document a job search runs on.
SubcueAI ships a free resume builder — start from a real career-sample template, fill in your experience, and export a clean PDF. It is genuinely free, not a trial that paywalls the download. The reason a resume builder lives inside an interview assistant is the second half: the resume you write here is the same document the live assistant reads during the interview. When the AI suggests an answer, it draws on your resume's bullets plus the job description — so a specific, well-structured resume makes the real-time suggestions specific too. A vague resume produces vague help.
What a resume builder cannot do is invent experience you do not have, or guarantee a callback in a market where one posting draws hundreds of applicants. What it can do is make the experience you do have legible to both a six-second human skim and the keyword parser in front of it. The answers below get specific — resume versus CV, tailoring to a job description, ATS-safe formatting, and how to pair your resume with the mock interviewer so practice answers pull from the same source the live assistant will.
- How does a free AI resume builder work?
- What does ATS-friendly resume formatting actually require?
- Does SubcueAI have a free resume builder?
- How do you write a resume for a software engineering interview?
- What is the difference between a resume and a CV?
- How do you tailor your resume to a job description?