Check role signal
RoleProof looks at whether the resume points toward a target lane instead of only counting job-description words.
Many ATS checker pages imply that a higher keyword score is the main goal. RoleProof treats ATS readiness as one part of a larger question: does the resume make a credible case for the role, and what proof should be repaired before the next application batch?
RoleProof is an ATS resume checker alternative for job seekers who want more than keyword matching. It reviews whether a resume proves the target role through clear projects, work evidence, metrics, and application direction, then suggests the next repair action before applying.
RoleProof gives job-search preparation signals for the resume, project, experience, and workflow artifacts you provide. It does not make employer decisions or submit applications for you.
Resume, project, work story, answer, or plan.
A keyword scanner says the resume is optimized but the work still sounds generic.
Use the resume as evidence, not just a keyword container.
RoleProof looks at whether the resume points toward a target lane instead of only counting job-description words.
The review highlights weak project, metric, implementation, ownership, or outcome evidence.
The result is a next action such as rewriting a project, clarifying scope, adding a live proof link, or tightening role targeting.
Use the resume as evidence, not just a keyword container.
What the resume asks an employer to believe without enough evidence.
Whether the document points toward the right job family and seniority signal.
The smallest useful change to make before another application batch.
The stronger version keeps useful keywords but ties them to proof, workflow, and outcome.
Used Python and SQL for data analysis.
Built Python and SQL analysis notebooks that cleaned customer-support data, grouped recurring issues, and produced a weekly dashboard for support leaders to prioritize fixes.
RoleProof can help with resume readiness, but it is not only a keyword scanner. It focuses on the proof behind the resume and the next job-search action.
No. Keywords matter when they accurately describe real evidence. The problem is adding keywords without proving scope, tools, results, or role fit.
No. It helps improve the application artifact. Interviews depend on fit, timing, market conditions, referrals, and employer decisions.
It is useful for students, new grads, career switchers, and job seekers whose resumes sound active but do not yet prove a clear target role.