Tag: better

  • Transform your Headshot

    Transform this photo into a sophisticated fashion studio portrait. Choose a background in a complementary color that enhances the person’s skin tone. Maintain a tight head-and-shoulders framing, with the person centered and facing the camera with an optimistic expression. Apply directional lighting with subtle shadows. Preserve natural skin tones, keeping the image refined, minimalist, and editorial—like a magazine spread.

  • How to write a better Résumé

    1/ Find Out Why You’re Getting Ignored:

    Upload your resume and the last job you applied to: “Act as the recruiter who skipped me. Tell me exactly why this resume got ignored. Be brutal. Point to specific lines that killed it. Don’t soften it.”

    This one prompt told my friend his resume read like a job description, not a person.

    2/ Pass the 7 Second Scan:

    Upload your resume to Claude: “Recruiters scan a resume for 7 seconds before deciding. Read mine for 7 seconds and tell me what you walked away with. Then rewrite the top third so the most important thing about me lands first.”

    If your name and title aren’t selling you in the top third, nothing below it matters.

    3/ Beat the ATS Filter:

    Paste to Claude: “Here’s the job posting: [paste]. Here’s my resume: [paste]. Find every keyword from the posting that’s missing from my resume. Rewrite my bullets so the keywords land naturally inside real accomplishments, not stuffed in a skills list.”

    40% of applications get filtered before a human sees them. Almost always for keyword mismatch.

    4/ Get the Interview Without Applying:

    Paste to Claude: “Write a 5 sentence message to the hiring manager at [company] for the [role]. My background: [paste]. Open with one specific thing about their company, connect it to one result I delivered, end with a 15 minute call ask. No buzzwords. No ‘I hope this finds you well.’”

    Cold messages to hiring managers convert 8x higher than online applications.

    5/ Run the Interview Before They Do:

    Paste to Claude: “Act as the hiring manager for [role]. Run a real 30 minute interview. Hit me with the behavioral questions, the trick questions, and the salary question. After every answer, score me 1 to 10 and show me what an A+ candidate would have said.”

    The “A+ answer” line is what nobody else gives you.

    6/ Stop Applying to the Wrong Jobs:

    Paste to Claude: “Search the web for roles hiring in 2026 that match this background: [paste]. List 7 job titles I should be targeting. For each one: real salary range, why I’m a strong fit, and the one skill gap I need to close before applying.”

    Most people apply to the wrong jobs for 6 months and blame the economy.

    7/ Build the Full System in One Project:

    Paste to Claude (save as a Project): “I’m running a job search for [role]. Save my resume, target companies, pitch lines, and interview answers in this Project. Every time I share a new job posting, tailor my resume and cover letter to it in under 2 minutes.”

    Set this up once. Apply to 30 jobs in the time it used to take to do 3. 

  • Unlock Better Image Prompts with This Simple AI Trick

    Creating the perfect prompt for AI image generators can feel like learning a new language. You need to consider:

    • Subject descriptions
    • Style specifications
    • Lighting details
    • Composition elements
    • Technical parameters

    The Trick: Reverse Engineering Image Prompts

    Most people waste hours tweaking prompts to get the right image. Instead, use existing images as inspiration to let AI craft detailed, optimized prompts for you.

    The process is simple:

    1. Choose an Image: Pick a reference image that captures the style, mood, or elements you want to recreate. This could be from:
      1. Stock photo sites
      2. Social media
      3. Art platforms
      4. Google Images
      5. Your own photo collection

    2. Upload and Analyze: Import the image into an AI tool like ChatGPT, Claude or Deepseek.

    3. Generate a Detailed Prompt: Ask the AI to provide a detailed description of the image. This description becomes your prompt for generating similar images.