Mistake 1: Letting AI Invent Skills and Experiences
This is the most dangerous mistake a graduate can make. When you ask an AI tool to tailor your resume for a job description, it may add skills or qualifications from the posting that you don't actually possess. While your resume might look like a perfect
match to an automated system, this fabrication will be exposed during the interview. A single technical question about a tool you’ve never used can end your candidacy and damage your credibility. Instead of letting AI invent content, use it to highlight and better describe the real experiences and projects you have completed during your studies or internships.
Mistake 2: Using a One-Size-Fits-All Resume
The ease of creating a resume with AI can tempt graduates to generate one generic document and send it everywhere. However, recruiters in India and globally can spot these low-effort applications from a mile away. Hiring managers expect resumes to be customized for the specific role, showing that you have read the job description and understand the company's needs. A generic resume suggests a lack of genuine interest. Use AI to analyze each job description and identify key skills, then prompt it to help you reframe your authentic experience to match those requirements for each application you send.
Mistake 3: Sounding Like a Robot
AI tools often produce text filled with overused buzzwords like "results-driven," "synergistic," and "dynamic team player." While these phrases sound professional, they are generic and fail to convey your unique personality or specific achievements. Recruiters are seeing a surge in applications that all sound the same, making it harder for any single one to stand out. Your resume should tell a story about what you've accomplished. Always review and rewrite AI-generated text to ensure it sounds like you and provides concrete examples rather than empty clichés.
Mistake 4: Accepting Vague or Fake Metrics
AI loves to add numbers to show impact, but it doesn't know your actual achievements. It might generate a bullet point like, "Increased efficiency by 40%," without any basis in reality. Hiring managers want to see measurable accomplishments, but those numbers must be accurate and something you can explain. If you can't confidently discuss how you achieved a certain metric during an interview, it doesn't belong on your resume. Always replace AI's placeholder numbers with your genuine, verifiable achievements from projects, internships, or coursework.
Mistake 5: Overlooking Basic Proofreading
A common assumption is that if AI wrote it, it must be grammatically perfect. This is not always true. AI tools can still make errors, produce awkward phrasing, or miss context-specific mistakes. Submitting a resume with typos or grammatical errors, whether written by you or an AI, makes you look unprofessional and suggests a lack of attention to detail. Always proofread the document carefully. Reading it aloud or having a friend, family member, or career advisor review it is a crucial final step before you hit send.
Mistake 6: Trusting AI with ATS Optimisation
Many AI tools claim to create Applicant Tracking System (ATS) friendly resumes. However, some achieve this by "keyword stuffing"—cramming your resume with terms from the job description in an unnatural way. While using keywords is important, modern ATS software is more sophisticated than that, and the resume must still be readable for the human recruiter who sees it next. A document overloaded with keywords looks spammy and inauthentic. Focus on using simple formatting and naturally incorporating relevant skills into your descriptions of real accomplishments.
















