Resume

Achievement Quantifier

Turn vague resume bullets into powerful, quantified achievements. Get metric suggestions, percentage improvements, and dollar figures that make your resume stand out.

Paste Your Resume Bullets

Enter your current resume bullet points, one per line. We will suggest quantified versions with metrics, percentages, and numbers.

Before & After Examples

See how adding metrics transforms weak bullets into powerful achievements.

Before

Managed a team of developers

After

Managed a team of 12 full-stack developers, delivering 8 product releases per quarter with 99.5% uptime

Before

Improved customer satisfaction

After

Improved customer satisfaction scores by 34% (from 72 to 96 NPS) by redesigning the onboarding experience

Before

Responsible for social media

After

Grew social media following from 5K to 45K+ across 4 platforms, driving a 28% increase in inbound leads

Before

Helped reduce costs

After

Identified and eliminated $340K in redundant vendor contracts, reducing operational costs by 22% annually

Before

Created training materials

After

Developed 25+ training modules used by 200+ employees, reducing onboarding time by 40% and improving first-quarter productivity by 30%

How to Quantify Your Resume Achievements

1. Start with the action

Begin every bullet with a strong past-tense action verb like “Spearheaded,” “Reduced,” or “Generated.” Avoid passive phrases like “was responsible for.”

2. Add a number — any number

Even approximate numbers are better than none. Think about: team size, budget, number of projects, clients served, or deadlines met.

3. Show the impact

Connect your work to a business outcome. Did it save money? Increase revenue? Improve efficiency? Reduce errors? Grow the customer base?

4. Use the right metric type

Match your metric to the achievement: percentages for improvements, dollar amounts for financial impact, headcounts for leadership, and timeframes for efficiency gains.

5. Be specific, not generic

“Increased sales” is forgettable. “Increased enterprise sales by 47% ($1.2M) in Q3 2024” is memorable and credible.

6. Use ranges when unsure

If you do not remember the exact number, use ranges or approximations: “50+”, “approximately 30%”, or “multi-million dollar.” Directionally accurate beats vague.

Sources & Further Reading: Indeed: How to Quantify Your Resume · Harvard Business Review: How to Make Your Resume Stand Out · Bureau of Labor Statistics: Occupational Outlook Handbook

Want AI to quantify YOUR entire resume?

Superpower Resume analyzes your real experience and automatically adds metrics, percentages, and dollar figures to every bullet point on your resume.

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