Resume writing tends to default to the verbs that feel most accurate from the inside — managed, supported, coordinated — even when the actual work involved significantly more ownership and impact than those words suggest. Verb replacement is the practice of finding language that is both honest and reflective of actual contribution. This concept covers the specific replacement choices that make resume bullets read more accurately.
Weak verb replacement is the targeted editing technique of swapping passive or generic resume action verbs — such as 'helped,' 'worked on,' or 'was responsible for' — with precise, high-impact verbs that convey ownership, scale, and measurable impact. Recruiters skim resumes in seconds, and strong verbs signal competence immediately.
AI can audit an entire resume for verb strength in moments and suggest contextually accurate replacements that align with the specific role and industry, something that would take a human coach much longer to do manually.
Paste your resume bullet points into Claude with the prompt: 'Identify every weak or passive action verb in these bullets. For each one, suggest three stronger alternatives that accurately reflect the level of ownership implied, and explain why each is stronger.' Review the suggestions and replace any verb that doesn't clearly communicate you led, owned, or drove the outcome.
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