You’re not bad at your job.
You’re bad at talking about your job.
Most professionals describe their work like this:
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“Responsible for…”
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“Worked on…”
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“Assisted with…”
And then wonder why:
It’s not because you lack experience.
It’s because you’re explaining tasks instead of impact.
Why doing good work isn’t enough:
If you can’t clearly articulate:
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what problems you solve
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what outcomes you drive
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why your work matters
…decision-makers have to guess.
(And they usually guess wrong.)
This course teaches you how to translate your work into the language hiring managers, recruiters, and leaders actually care about.
What This Mini-Course Teaches You:
- Identify the real value behind your day-to-day work
- Connect your responsibilities to outcomes, metrics, and results
- Write impact statements you can reuse across:
- your resume
- LinkedIn
- cover letters
- recruiter messages
- interviews
- promotion & raise conversations
Stop underselling yourself — without exaggerating or lying.
This is a career skill, not a one-time exercise.
What’s Included
- A step-by-step framework to turn tasks into impact
- Clear examples from real roles (not just “ideal” resumes)
- Prompts to help you quantify work that wasn’t obviously measurable
- Guidance on adapting the same impact story for different contexts
- A simple way to pressure-test your language using AI (without sounding robotic)
Who This Is For
- you know you’re capable but struggle to explain why
- your resume feels accurate but not compelling
- interviews turn into rambling explanations
- you freeze when asked, “So what impact did you have?”
- you want to advocate for yourself without feeling awkward or braggy
Who This Is Not For
This is not:
- a resume template dump
- generic “action verb” advice
- fluff about confidence without substance
- a course that teaches you to exaggerate your experience
The Outcome
After this, you’ll have:
- clear impact statements you can reuse everywhere (for the rest of your career!)
- language that frames interview questions before they’re asked
- confidence rooted in evidence, not hype
- a way to talk about your work that actually lands
Turn your work into impact — and stop hoping people “just see it.”