Use case · Job Hunt

One posting.
A tailored application.
Ten minutes.

The application kit for people who send more than one. Editor tailors the résumé, Herald writes the cover letter, Shine delivers the headshot — all tuned to the same role.

· The kit ·

Three agents. One application.

Generic AI writes you a generic application. A specialist reads the posting and tunes each piece — résumé, letter, and face — to the same target.

1

Editor — résumé

Paste the posting. Upload your résumé. Get a version with bullets reframed to answer what the role actually asks for. 5 credits.

2

Editor — cover letter

Same agent, different mode. Three paragraphs that open with something specific to the role — not "excited to apply." 5 credits.

3

Shine — headshot

Upload 5 selfies. Get a LinkedIn-ready headshot that still looks like you. Drop into the profile. 12 credits.

· For who ·

This kit is for:

Career switchers

Moving between industries means reframing every bullet. The specialist agents do it per posting.

New grads

First real applications. The kit handles everything except the actual interview.

Laid-off senior ICs

Ten years of wins, too much to compress. Editor picks the right ones per role.

Return-to-work parents

Tailoring a résumé after a gap is its own skill. Editor handles the framing.

Internal transfers

Different team, same company. A fresh application kit without starting from scratch.

Batch applicators

20 postings a weekend. The kit makes per-role tuning actually possible.

· Math ·

What does a job-hunt kit cost?

One full application (Editor résumé 5 + Editor cover letter 5 + Shine 12) = 22 credits.

  • Day Pass ($4.99, 20 credits): About half an application. Good for trying one piece.
  • Weekly ($9.99, 50 credits): One full application + a spare cover letter.
  • Pro ($19.99/mo, 200 credits): Nine full applications per month. Serious job-hunt pace.
  • Free first cast: Run each agent once on the house. Zero risk, real output.

Stop re-writing the same bullets.

Free first cast, every agent. See what a specialist-tuned application looks like.

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