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Achievement Quantifier

Turn "did stuff" into "delivered $2.4M in pipeline revenue"

Recruiters spend 7 seconds on a resume (Ladders). Vague duties get skimmed. Quantified achievements get interviews. This skill takes your job duties and accomplishments and rewrites them with specific numbers, percentages, and business impact — even when you don't think your work is measurable.

House RecipeWork2 min

PROMPT

Help me quantify my work achievements for my resume. I'll describe what I did in each role and you'll help me turn vague duties into quantified accomplishments. For each item I share: (1) Ask me specific questions to extract numbers: How many people? What budget? What timeline? What was the before/after? What did it save or generate? (2) Rewrite the bullet point with quantified impact — start with a strong action verb, include the specific number or percentage, and tie it to business value. (3) If I genuinely don't have exact numbers, help me estimate reasonably. (4) Show me the before and after so I can see the improvement. My role: [job title at company] What I did: [describe your responsibilities and accomplishments in your own words]

How It Works

Describe what you did in a role — even in vague, conversational terms.

Your Claw asks targeted questions to uncover the numbers hiding in your

work, then rewrites each bullet point with quantified impact that makes

recruiters stop and read.

What You Get

  • Duty-to-achievement translation: "managed social media" → "grew Instagram from 2K to 15K followers in 8 months, driving 340% increase in engagement"
  • Guided quantification: prompts to help you recall numbers you didn't know you had
  • Multiple metrics per achievement where possible (time saved, money saved, people impacted)
  • Before/after comparison so you can see the difference
  • Industry-appropriate language and metrics

Setup Steps

  1. Paste your current resume bullets or describe your responsibilities in plain language
  2. Your Claw asks follow-up questions to extract numbers and context
  3. Review the quantified versions
  4. Pick the strongest bullets for your resume
  5. Update your master resume with the improved language

Tips

  • You have more numbers than you think — team size, budget, timeline, user count all count
  • If you can't find an exact number, reasonable estimates are fine ("~200" not "a lot")
  • Lead with the result, not the action: "Reduced costs by 30%" not "Led project that reduced costs"
  • Different industries value different metrics — your Claw adjusts to your field
  • Run this for every role in your work history, not just the most recent
Tags:#resume#job-search#writing#career