EdgeApply Blog
Career advice that actually gets you hired.

Practical guides on resumes, cover letters, LinkedIn, and standing out in a competitive market.

Resume
What is ATS and why does your resume keep getting rejected?
Cover Letter
How to write a cover letter that actually gets read
Cover Letter
Cover letter mistakes that get you rejected instantly
Cover Letter
How to start a cover letter without saying "I am writing to apply"
Career
Do cover letters still matter in 2025?
Resume
How to explain a career gap in your resume
Resume
How to write a resume with no experience
LinkedIn
How to write a LinkedIn headline that gets you found
LinkedIn
How to write a LinkedIn About section that works
LinkedIn
Why your LinkedIn profile is losing you opportunities
Career
How to assess where you are in your career
Career
What recruiters actually see when they look at your resume
Career
How to upskill strategically
Role-specific
Business analyst skills that get you promoted faster
Resume
How to score your own resume before sending it

What is ATS and why does your resume keep getting rejected?

You spent hours perfecting your resume. You're qualified for the role. You hit submit — and then nothing. No call, no email, not even a rejection. What happened?

Chances are, your resume never made it to a human being. It was filtered out automatically by an Applicant Tracking System — ATS for short.

What is an ATS?

An ATS is software that companies use to manage job applications. Large employers receive hundreds — sometimes thousands — of applications for a single role. ATS software scans and ranks resumes automatically, filtering out candidates before a recruiter ever reviews them. Studies suggest that over 75% of resumes are rejected by ATS systems before reaching a human.

How does ATS work?

ATS systems scan your resume for specific keywords, phrases, and formatting signals. They look for matches between your resume and the job description. Common reasons ATS systems reject resumes:

  • Missing keywords from the job description
  • Using tables, columns, or graphics that confuse the parser
  • Unusual section headings like "My Journey" instead of "Work Experience"
  • Spelling out abbreviations differently from the job posting

How to beat ATS the right way

The best approach isn't to trick the ATS — it's to genuinely tailor your resume to match each role. Read the job description carefully, note the specific language and skills, and mirror that language naturally in your resume. Use standard section headings and stick to simple formatting.

EdgeApply analyses the job description and rewrites your resume to be ATS-optimised — in seconds.

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How to write a cover letter that actually gets read

Most cover letters are ignored. Recruiters spend an average of 6 seconds scanning a resume — and even less on a cover letter that looks like every other one they've seen. But a genuinely good cover letter can be the difference between an interview and a rejection.

Start with something that stops them

Never open with "I am writing to apply for..." — it's the most common opener in existence and immediately signals a generic letter. Instead, open with a specific achievement, a compelling observation about the company, or a direct statement of value. You have one sentence to make them want to keep reading.

Connect your experience to their need

Your cover letter isn't about you — it's about how you solve their problem. Read the job description as a brief. What are they most worried about? What outcome do they need? Then show specifically how your background addresses that. Two or three concrete examples beat a list of adjectives every time.

Close with confidence, not desperation

Don't end with "I hope to hear from you." End with a confident statement of your interest and a clear next step — something like "I'd welcome the chance to discuss how my experience aligns with what you're building." Confidence is attractive. Desperation isn't.

Keep it to one page

Three to four paragraphs. No longer. Recruiters don't have time for essays, and a long cover letter signals that you don't respect theirs.

EdgeApply generates a personalised cover letter from your resume and job description — in under a minute.

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Cover letter mistakes that get you rejected instantly

A bad cover letter can undo an otherwise strong application. Here are the mistakes that signal to recruiters that you haven't done the work — and how to avoid every one of them.

1. Starting with "I am writing to apply"

It's the most common cover letter opener in the world, which means it's also the most ignored. Recruiters have read this sentence thousands of times. It tells them nothing about you and makes no case for why they should keep reading.

2. Summarising your resume instead of adding to it

Your cover letter and resume should work together, not repeat each other. The cover letter is your opportunity to add context, tell a story, and show personality. If you're just restating what's already in your resume, you've wasted everyone's time.

3. Writing a generic letter you use for every application

Recruiters can tell. A letter that could apply to any company at any time tells a recruiter that you're not particularly interested in their company. Mention something specific — the role, the team, the product, the company's mission. Show you've done the work.

4. Making it all about you

The hiring manager's question isn't "what does this person want?" — it's "what can this person do for us?" Frame everything in terms of value delivered, not career goals achieved.

5. Spelling or grammar errors

One typo can end your application. Read it aloud, run it through a spell checker, and have someone else read it before you send. There's no excuse for errors in a document you've had unlimited time to prepare.

EdgeApply generates a polished, personalised cover letter that avoids every one of these mistakes.

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How to start a cover letter (without saying "I am writing to apply")

The opening line of your cover letter is the most important sentence in the document. It determines whether a recruiter keeps reading or moves on. Here are five proven ways to start strong — with examples.

1. Lead with a specific achievement

"When I led the digital transformation initiative that reduced processing time by 34%, I understood for the first time what good business analysis actually looks like."

This opener immediately signals competence, specificity, and relevance — before the recruiter even knows your name.

2. Reference something specific about the company

"Your recent expansion into Southeast Asian markets caught my attention — it's exactly the kind of strategic challenge I've spent five years preparing for."

Shows genuine research and interest. Signals you wrote this letter for them, not anyone.

3. State your value proposition directly

"I help organisations turn complex data into decisions that stick. That's what I've done for the past six years, and it's exactly what your Senior Analyst role needs."

Direct, confident, and immediately answers the recruiter's central question.

4. Open with the problem you solve

"Most ATS implementations fail not because of the technology, but because no one properly mapped the business requirements first. I've spent three years making sure that doesn't happen."

Demonstrates industry insight and positions you as a solution, not just a candidate.

5. Use a compelling career observation

"The best stakeholder relationships aren't built in meetings — they're built in the moments between them. That philosophy has shaped every project I've delivered."

Shows personality and a point of view. Makes you memorable.

EdgeApply writes your entire cover letter — starting with a strong, personalised opener based on your actual experience.

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Do cover letters still matter in 2025?

It's a fair question. With AI-driven ATS systems, LinkedIn Easy Apply, and one-click applications, does anyone actually read cover letters anymore?

The honest answer: it depends on the role, the company, and the recruiter. But here's why you should still write one — and write it well.

When cover letters definitely matter

For senior or leadership roles, cover letters are almost always read. For roles that require strong communication skills — writing, marketing, PR, strategy, consulting — your cover letter is itself a demonstration of that skill. For companies that explicitly ask for one, not providing a strong one is an immediate disadvantage.

When cover letters are often skipped

High-volume hiring, technical roles with very specific skill requirements, and applications made through platforms like LinkedIn Easy Apply often don't result in cover letters being read at all. In these cases, your resume does the heavy lifting.

The risk calculation

A weak cover letter can hurt you. A strong one can only help. Given that EdgeApply can generate a personalised, compelling cover letter in under a minute, the question isn't whether to write one — it's whether you can afford not to.

The job seekers who stand out are the ones who treat every application as if every element will be read. That discipline is what separates candidates who get interviews from candidates who don't.

Generate a compelling cover letter for any role in under a minute — free, no account needed.

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How to explain a career gap in your resume

Career gaps are more common than ever — and more accepted than ever. Whether you took time off for family, health, travel, study, or were simply caught in a difficult job market, how you frame a gap matters far more than the gap itself.

Don't try to hide it

Gaps are visible on any chronological resume. Trying to obscure them with formatting tricks or vague dates often raises more questions than the gap itself. Recruiters notice. Honesty, combined with a confident framing, is always the better strategy.

Address it briefly in your summary

A one-sentence acknowledgement in your professional summary does more than any cover letter explanation: "Following a period of family caregiving in 2023, I am now fully focused on returning to senior business analysis roles." Simple, direct, and it removes the question before it's asked.

Reframe the gap as activity, not absence

What did you do during the gap? Freelance work, volunteering, online courses, caregiving, personal projects — all of these demonstrate that you kept active and developing. List them. Even informal activities show initiative and self-direction.

Focus the rest of the resume on strength

The best response to a gap concern is a resume so strong that the gap becomes irrelevant. Let your achievements, skills, and tailored language do the work. A gap of a year or two disappears when everything else on the page is compelling.

EdgeApply tailors your resume to highlight your strengths — whatever your career history looks like.

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How to write a resume with no experience

Everyone starts somewhere. The challenge for graduates and career starters is that most resume advice assumes you have a decade of work history to draw from. Here's how to build a compelling resume when you don't.

Reframe what counts as experience

Experience doesn't only mean paid employment. Academic projects, internships, volunteer work, freelance work, sports leadership, society committee roles, part-time jobs — all of these demonstrate skills, initiative, and the ability to deliver. List them all.

Lead with a strong summary

Your professional summary is your opportunity to set the frame before the reader notices what's missing. Lead with your strongest skills, your relevant degree or training, and your clear career direction. Be specific — "recent business analytics graduate with strong SQL and data visualisation skills seeking a junior analyst role" beats "motivated graduate seeking opportunities."

Emphasise transferable skills

Communication, problem-solving, teamwork, project management, data analysis, writing — these skills appear in almost every professional role and can be demonstrated through academic and personal experience as much as professional. Be specific about where and how you used them.

Tailor aggressively

When you have limited experience, tailoring your resume to each specific role matters more, not less. Every word on the page needs to earn its place. Mirror the language of the job description, emphasise the most relevant coursework and projects, and make it impossible for a recruiter to doubt your fit for this specific role.

EdgeApply helps you tailor your resume to every role — even when you're just starting out.

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How to write a LinkedIn headline that gets you found by recruiters

Your LinkedIn headline is the most visible line on your entire profile. It appears in search results, connection requests, comments, and every recruiter search. Most people waste it with their job title. Here's how to make it work for you.

Understand how LinkedIn search works

Recruiters search LinkedIn the same way people search Google — with keywords. If your headline is "Business Analyst at Acme Corp," you'll only appear when someone searches for that exact phrase. If your headline includes the specific skills and specialisations recruiters search for, your profile appears in far more searches.

The formula that works

The most effective LinkedIn headlines combine a role title with two or three key specialisations, separated by | or ·. For example: Senior Business Analyst | Digital Transformation | Agile | Stakeholder Engagement. This is keyword-rich, scannable, and tells both humans and LinkedIn's algorithm exactly what you do.

What to avoid

Avoid vague phrases like "passionate professional," "results-driven leader," or "seeking new opportunities." These phrases appear in millions of profiles and add zero search value. Recruiters search for skills and roles, not personality adjectives.

Keep it under 120 characters

LinkedIn truncates headlines in search results. Make sure your most important keywords appear in the first 60-70 characters so they're always visible.

EdgeApply generates a recruiter-optimised LinkedIn headline from your resume — free, no login needed.

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How to write a LinkedIn About section that actually works

Your LinkedIn About section is 2,600 characters of prime real estate that most professionals either leave blank or fill with a copied version of their resume summary. Neither approach works. Here's how to write an About section that makes recruiters want to reach out.

Write in first person

LinkedIn is a professional social network, not a formal document. Write as you would speak to a senior colleague — confident, clear, and human. Third person ("John is a seasoned analyst...") reads as stiff and impersonal on a platform built for connection.

Structure it in three parts

The best About sections follow a simple structure: open with a compelling value statement or career philosophy, follow with two or three specific achievements or areas of expertise, and close with what you're looking for or what kind of opportunities interest you. This gives recruiters everything they need to assess fit in 30 seconds.

Front-load the most important information

LinkedIn shows only the first three lines before a "see more" click. Make those three lines count. Lead with your strongest, most keyword-rich statement — don't build to your point, start with it.

Include keywords naturally

LinkedIn's search algorithm uses your About section for keyword matching. Include the specific skills, tools, methodologies, and role titles that recruiters in your field search for — but write them naturally into sentences, not as a keyword list.

EdgeApply generates a polished, keyword-optimised LinkedIn About section from your resume in seconds.

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Why your LinkedIn profile is losing you job opportunities

Recruiters actively search LinkedIn every day for candidates — often for roles that are never publicly advertised. If your profile isn't optimised, you're invisible to them. Here are the most common reasons LinkedIn profiles fail to attract opportunities.

A generic or empty headline

Using only your job title as your headline means you only appear in searches for that exact title. A keyword-rich headline that includes your specialisations, skills, and industry terms expands your visibility dramatically.

No About section — or a copied resume summary

A blank About section signals to recruiters that you're not actively thinking about your professional brand. A copied resume summary is only marginally better. Your About section should add context and personality that your resume can't.

Experience descriptions that list responsibilities, not achievements

LinkedIn experience sections that read like job descriptions — "responsible for managing projects, coordinating with stakeholders" — tell recruiters nothing about your impact. Rewrite each role around outcomes: what you delivered, improved, or changed.

Missing or outdated skills section

LinkedIn's skills section directly affects search visibility. Recruiters filter by skills constantly. If your skills section is empty, outdated, or missing the terminology your target employers use, you won't appear in their searches.

Inconsistency with your resume

Recruiters often check LinkedIn alongside a resume. Inconsistencies in dates, job titles, or experience descriptions raise red flags. Your LinkedIn and resume don't need to be identical, but they should tell a consistent story.

EdgeApply optimises your LinkedIn headline, About section, and skills from your resume — no LinkedIn login needed.

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How to assess where you are in your career — and where you should be heading

Most professionals are so focused on the next application that they never stop to assess where they actually stand. Understanding your current positioning — your level, your strengths, your gaps — is the foundation of every good career decision.

Start with an honest audit

Look at your last three to five years of experience. What have you consistently delivered? What have you been promoted for, praised for, or brought in specifically to do? These patterns reveal your genuine strengths — not what you wish you were good at, but what you demonstrably are.

Understand your market level

Job titles vary enormously across industries and companies. A "Senior Analyst" at one firm might be equivalent to a "Manager" at another. Instead of anchoring to titles, assess yourself against outcomes: What's the scope of decisions you own? How many people depend on your work? What's the financial or strategic impact of your role? These questions place you more accurately in the market than any title.

Identify the gap between where you are and where you want to be

Once you understand your current level, map it against your target role. What skills, experiences, or credentials does your target role require that you don't currently have? Be specific. "More leadership experience" is not a gap — "I've led projects but not direct reports" is. Specificity makes gaps actionable.

Use every application as a data point

Every job description you read tells you something about what the market values. Every interview gives you feedback about how others perceive your positioning. Every rejection is information. The professionals who advance fastest treat their career like a strategy problem — gathering data, testing hypotheses, and adjusting accordingly.

EdgeApply's Career Assessment gives you an honest AI assessment of your career positioning, strengths, and gaps — based on your actual resume.

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What recruiters actually see when they look at your resume — and what you don't

You see your resume as a record of everything you've done. A recruiter sees it as a 6-second filtering exercise. Understanding that gap is the most important thing you can do for your job search.

The 6-second scan

Eye-tracking research consistently shows that recruiters spend an average of 6-7 seconds on an initial resume review. In that time, they're scanning for: your current or most recent job title, the companies you've worked for, whether your experience duration makes sense, any obvious gaps, and whether anything immediately relevant jumps out. Everything else is secondary until they decide to read further.

What they're actually looking for

Recruiters are pattern matchers. They have a mental model of what the right candidate looks like — often built from the job description and the best candidates they've seen so far. They're scanning your resume to see if you match that pattern. The closer the match, the longer they read. This is why tailoring matters so much — a generic resume rarely matches the pattern closely enough to earn a longer look.

What gets you filtered out before a human sees you

At many large companies, the recruiter isn't even the first reader. ATS software scans and scores your resume before any human touches it. Poor keyword match, unusual formatting, and missing section headings can all result in your resume being filtered out automatically — regardless of how strong your actual experience is.

What genuinely impresses

Quantified achievements. Specific outcomes. Language that mirrors the role. A clear career trajectory. These are the signals that move a resume from the maybe pile to the interview pile. Adjectives don't impress — numbers do.

EdgeApply tailors your resume to match exactly what recruiters and ATS systems are looking for in each specific role.

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How to upskill strategically — without wasting time on the wrong courses

The upskilling industry is enormous. LinkedIn Learning, Coursera, Udemy, and dozens of others offer thousands of courses on everything imaginable. The problem isn't access to learning — it's knowing which skills are actually worth your time.

Start with the market, not your interests

The most efficient upskilling starts with a clear target role. Read 20-30 job descriptions for the role you want. Note the skills that appear most frequently. Cross-reference with what you already have. The gap between those two lists is your upskilling priority list — not your interests, not what looks impressive, but what the market is consistently asking for.

Distinguish between threshold skills and differentiating skills

Threshold skills are the minimum requirements to be considered for a role. Differentiating skills are what separate you from other candidates once you're in the running. Focus on threshold skills first — if you don't have them, nothing else matters. Then build differentiating skills to stand out.

Prioritise demonstrated skills over certified skills

A certificate proves you completed a course. A portfolio project, a quantified achievement, or a real-world application of a skill proves you can actually use it. Wherever possible, learn by doing — build something, solve a real problem, contribute to an open project. These are far more compelling on a resume than a list of certifications.

The rule of 80%

You don't need to master a skill to list it credibly. You need to be able to speak to it intelligently and apply it at a basic level. For most job searches, getting to 80% proficiency in the right skills beats getting to 100% in the wrong ones. Be strategic about where you invest your learning time.

EdgeApply's Career Assessment gives you a personalised upskilling plan based on your resume and target role — specific skills, not generic advice.

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Business analyst skills that will get you promoted faster in 2025

Business analysis is one of the most versatile roles in any organisation — which also means it's one of the most competitive. If you're a BA looking to move up, here are the skills that genuinely accelerate progression.

Advanced data skills beyond Excel

Most BAs can use Excel. The ones who get promoted can use SQL to pull their own data, Power BI or Tableau to build dashboards independently, and Python or R for more complex analysis. You don't need to become a data scientist — you need to be able to answer business questions without waiting for a data analyst to help you.

Process mapping and workflow tools

Visio is the standard, but Miro, Lucidchart, and Figma for process flows are increasingly common. Being able to document, analyse, and redesign processes visually — and facilitate workshops around them — is a core senior BA skill that many mid-level analysts underinvest in.

Agile methodology — deeply, not superficially

Most BAs now claim Agile experience. Fewer can genuinely facilitate sprint ceremonies, write effective user stories with clear acceptance criteria, manage a product backlog, or work comfortably in a cross-functional squad. The depth of your Agile knowledge is increasingly what separates mid-level from senior BAs.

Stakeholder management and facilitation

The further you progress in business analysis, the more your value comes from your ability to align people, not just analyse data. Workshop facilitation, requirements elicitation, conflict resolution, and executive communication are the skills that open doors to Principal BA, Lead BA, and beyond.

Business case development

Senior BAs are expected to quantify the value of solutions, not just describe them. Understanding how to build a business case — costs, benefits, risks, ROI, payback period — and present it persuasively to leadership is a skill that dramatically increases your strategic value.

Paste your BA resume into EdgeApply's Career Assessment for a personalised upskilling plan tailored to your specific background and target role.

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How to score your own resume before sending it — what to look for

Before you send your resume anywhere, you should be able to assess it objectively. Here's a framework for scoring your own resume across the dimensions that actually matter to employers and ATS systems.

Keyword match (0-25 points)

Copy the job description into a word counter. Note the most frequent substantive words — skills, tools, methodologies, role titles. Then check how many appear naturally in your resume. If fewer than half are present, your keyword match is poor and your ATS score will reflect that. Target: 70%+ of key terms appearing at least once.

Achievement quantification (0-25 points)

Count your bullet points. How many include a specific number, percentage, dollar amount, or timeframe? If fewer than half your bullets are quantified, you're leaving impact on the table. Recruiters respond to outcomes, not responsibilities. Target: at least 60% of bullets quantified.

Relevance ordering (0-25 points)

Does your most relevant experience appear prominently? Is your professional summary specifically tailored to this role? Would a recruiter scanning for 6 seconds immediately see evidence of fit? If your most relevant achievements are buried halfway down the page, your relevance score suffers.

Formatting and readability (0-25 points)

Can the resume be parsed by ATS? Single column, standard headings, no tables or text boxes, consistent date formatting. Is it readable at a glance? Clear hierarchy, appropriate white space, consistent font sizes. A beautiful resume that can't be parsed is worse than a plain one that can.

EdgeApply scores your resume's ATS match before and after tailoring — and shows you the improvement in real time.

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