We’ve been shipping steadily through the Apply To It alpha, and this update is a good moment to catch up on what’s changed.
The theme this round: make the everyday job-search loop — capture a job, compare it to your resume, and decide what to do next — smoother and easier to trust.
Apply To It is a passive application intelligence tool that helps you decide whether a job is worth applying to. It lets job seekers save the roles they view, compare a resume against a job description, and understand whether a position is worth their time before they apply.
More reliable job capture
The Chrome extension now does a better job of pulling the details that matter from a posting — title, company, location, and the available job description — across supported job boards like LinkedIn, Indeed, and ZipRecruiter.
That means fewer half-captured listings, fewer “untitled” jobs in your list, and a cleaner application history to learn from later.
When a posting changes after you’ve saved it, capture is also more resilient. Re-scanning a job can pick up edits instead of silently keeping a stale copy.
A clearer Job Match Score
The job match view got a cleanup.
The score, keyword hits, and the gaps between your resume and the job posting are easier to read at a glance, so you can decide quickly whether a role is worth a tailored application or a pass.
The goal isn’t a bigger number. It’s a faster, more honest read on fit.
A good job search is not just about applying to more roles. It is about seeing which jobs match your background, which ones are weak fits, and where your resume may need adjustment before you apply.
Jump straight to the full report
From a job match in the extension, you can now open the full report in your dashboard in one click.
That is useful when you want more space to review the full comparison, check missing keywords, or compare the same job against another resume.
The extension is meant to stay lightweight. The dashboard is where the deeper resume comparison and application history live.
What’s next
We’re focused on the fundamentals before general availability: better job capture, clearer resume-to-job comparisons, and a faster loop from viewing a job to understanding whether it is worth your time.
If you’re in the alpha and something feels rough, that feedback is exactly what shapes the next update.
Thanks for kicking the tires with us.