SiviGen

Resume Achievement Finder

Turn what you did into a truthful, evidence-backed resume bullet — no invented metrics.

Runs entirely in your browser — nothing is uploaded or stored.

Fill in what you did and your evidence-backed bullet appears here.

What the evidence interview uncovers

Take one real thing you did and see how it becomes a defensible bullet — with a clear line between what your evidence supports and what it doesn't.

Evidence discovered

  • Technical change — migrated backend services to Cloudflare Workers.
  • Motivation — moved off a legacy runtime to cut cold-start overhead.
  • Ownership — you implemented the migration plan yourself.

Missing evidence

No measurable result was provided — latency, cost, and reliability numbers are all absent.

Safe CV bullet

Migrated backend services to Cloudflare Workers, taking ownership by implementing the migration plan, using Cloudflare Workers.

Do not claim yet

No outcome was supplied, so none of these are supported — leave them off until you can source a real number.

  • Reduced latency
  • Reduced cost
  • Improved scalability

What makes a resume achievement strong

A strong achievement is specific anddefensible. It names the change you made, the part you personally owned, the tools you used, and the constraint that made it hard — and it only claims a result when there's a real number behind it. Every one of those pieces is something an interviewer can ask about, and every one you can answer.

The trap most bullets fall into is jumping straight to impact — “improved performance”, “increased scalability” — with nothing underneath. This tool builds the bullet from the ground up instead: your actual actions first, results only if you have them.

Task vs achievement vs unsupported claim

Task

“Responsible for backend services.” A job description — it says nothing about what you did or how well.

Achievement

“Migrated backend services to Cloudflare Workers, implementing the migration plan.” Specific, owned, defensible.

Unsupported claim

“Cut latency 40% and slashed costs.” Impressive — but with no source, it collapses on the first follow-up question.

When to use it

  • Rewriting a vague job-description line into a bullet you can defend.
  • Turning a real project — at work or university — into CV-ready evidence.
  • Checking, before you apply, which claims your evidence actually supports.
  • Prepping for interviews so every bullet has proof ready behind it.

Ready to do this for real?

This free tool gives you a useful first pass. SiviGen does the whole job — with AI that only ever uses facts your CV already supports.

On the record

Frequently asked questions

A resume achievement is a specific thing you did at work, described with the ownership, tools, constraints, and results that make it credible. It's more than a task on a job description — it shows what you personally contributed and what came of it, in language an interviewer can probe.