Inside every tailoring
Sherlock.
The honest inference engine.
Your resume proves more than it says. Someone who reviewed and challenged contractor claims to protect a budget has exercised negotiation, commercial judgment, and stakeholder management, even if none of those words appear on the page.
Sherlock is the engine inside every Resumiz tailoring that finds those skills. It reads your work the way a detective reads a case file, surfaces the abilities your experience proves but never names, and anchors every single one to real evidence. It never invents. That is the whole point.
The problem
Every tool before this made you choose.
Copy-forward tools
They polish what you already wrote and stop there. The skills your work proves but never names stay invisible, which is exactly where most qualified candidates lose.
Rewrite tools
They optimize toward the posting by inventing: added skills, inflated numbers, upgraded titles. The resume scores well and then collapses in the interview.
Sherlock is the third way: everything true about you, including the parts you never wrote down.
How Sherlock reads
Three buckets. One rule.
01
Explicit matches
You state a skill and the job asks for it. Sherlock surfaces it prominently, in the exact vocabulary of the posting, so screening software and human readers both see the match.
02
Honest inference
The signature move. Real work implies real skills. Sherlock names the skill the job cares about and shows the evidence in the same breath: the real activity in your history that proves it. Nothing surfaces without its proof.
03
Genuine gaps
The job asks for something nothing in your history supports. Sherlock will not pretend. The gap goes to your missing keywords and your interview prep, because knowing it beats bluffing it.
The rule
The line Sherlock never crosses.
Every inferred skill must be anchored to a specific, real activity already in your resume. If Sherlock cannot point to the evidence, it is a gap, not an inference.
It infers skills from real work. It never invents the work itself, and it never invents a number, a tool, or a credential. Everything it writes, you can defend in the interview. That is the difference between inference and fabrication, and it is the line this entire product is built on.
Where you see it
Sherlock signs its work.
Competencies with receipts
The competencies section of your tailored resume carries the explicit and the honestly inferred skills, each one backed by real work shown in the experience below it.
Changes explained, on Pro
The line-by-line change log names every transferable skill Sherlock surfaced and the evidence it anchored it to, in plain English.
Gaps, on every plan
Every tailoring lists the required terms Sherlock found no evidence for. Free included. Honest gaps are part of the product, not a paid extra.
Your resume knows
more than it says.
Sherlock runs in every tailoring, on every plan. Three free a month, no credit card.
Start free