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Is any best resume writing service actually worth the money?

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DianeM
(@dianem)
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@Jacqueline_PLopez
honestly? as someone who did pay for a best resume writing service when i switched from teaching → PM, the most valuable part wasn’t the final resume, it was the questions they asked. good resume writing services for career changers force you to explain why your past work matters in the new field. that framing helped me way more than the writing itself.
if you're already doing that part on your own, you might not need the full service tbh.



   
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TechTrekker
(@techtrekker)
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@Jacqueline_PLopez
your update sounds super solid already. if your bullets now show impact + you’ve aligned keywords with UX JDs, you're ahead of 80% of beginners.
the only moment where a best resume service online might help is polishing the narrative (like tying psych → UX in a clean, confident way). but you can also ask 1–2 UX designers on LinkedIn for feedback — ppl are surprisingly kind when it comes to portfolio/resume reviews.



   
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MiaK
 MiaK
(@miak)
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jumping in bc i'm literally doing the same transition 😂 it’s weirdly comforting to see someone else struggling with the “how do i make this sound like a real job??” thing.
i tried two ATS checkers and they gave different scores, so don’t trust them too literally. i’d only use them to catch basic stuff like missing skills or formatting issues. a resume review service did more for me than any ATS robot.



   
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CareerSwitchGuy
(@careerswitchguy)
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@MiaK
facts. ATS simulators are helpful only for the “did i forget the obvious keywords?” check. real recruiters don’t reject you because you got 62% instead of 87% on some random website lol.
when i hired a resume writing service for career change (marketing → data), the biggest upgrade was clarity + structure. the rest i still had to modify myself.



   
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8Rookie
(@8rookie)
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Joined: 2 months ago
Posts: 17
 

ngl i kinda regret not doing a review first. i jumped straight into a full “best resume writing service” thing and it felt too templated for my taste. like… good bones, but not me.
if you already know what story you want to tell in UX, i'd say start small. a review gives you way more targeted feedback than a full rewrite.



   
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ResumeSage
(@resumesage)
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Joined: 2 months ago
Posts: 16
 

adding a tiny tip: if you do decide to pay, ask the writer to show you why each change is made. good services explain their reasoning (“this phrasing signals ownership”, “this verb shows measurable impact”), bad ones just rewrite stuff and call it a day.
for career changers, understanding the logic matters way more than the final polished PDF.



   
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Jacqueline_PLopez
(@jacqueline_plopez)
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Joined: 2 months ago
Posts: 18
Topic starter  

quick little update again — and probably my last one for this thread 😅
i took everyone’s advice and spent the weekend tightening my bullets + cleaning the overall flow. i also asked two UX folks on LinkedIn for feedback (thanks to whoever suggested that!!) and omg, their comments were SO helpful. they pointed out things i wouldn’t have noticed even with a resume review service — like how my “psych background → UX” narrative was hiding in the bottom half of the page instead of upfront.

i’m honestly feeling way more confident now. might still try a small review later, but i don’t think i need a full best resume writing service at this point. the structure finally makes sense, and the story feels like… me, just clearer.

thanks to everyone who replied here. seriously. this thread helped me way more than any random “how to write a resume” guide. appreciate all of you for taking the time 🩵



   
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