Know before you apply
Fit score, ATS check, and an honest apply-or-skip call for any role.
/1-assessOperating system · Job search
A job search operating system inside Claude Code. You make the calls: the system does the heavy lifting, from tailored applications and interview prep to a clear read on what is working and where your best odds are.
Every assessment, application, and interview adds to the picture. The system spots the patterns and the opportunities, and strategically guides you through them.
Set the direction
Fit score, ATS check, and an honest apply-or-skip call for any role.
/1-assessA live dashboard of your pipeline, conversion rates, and patterns.
/4-dashboardLinkedIn audit, content strategy, and posts that build visibility.
/5-linkedinWin the process
A tailored CV, a human cover letter, and a recruiter message per role.
/2-applyQuestion forecasts, answer polish, and live mock interviews with coaching.
/3-interviewBonus module: a personal website built from your profile.
/6-websiteLearn it in under an hour. The guided interactive course runs inside Claude Code and sets up your real search as you go.
Set it up ↓Every CV, answer, and insight is a file on your computer. You own all of it.
Runs in your own Claude account. Your search stays between you and your files.
Plain files you can open, edit, and keep forever. Nothing lives in someone else's app.
About 15 minutes. No coding, and if you use the Claude desktop app, no terminal either.
Download the zip below and unzip it somewhere permanent you'll remember, like your Documents folder. The unzipped folder is called job-search-os. That folder is the operating system.
curl -fsSL https://claude.ai/install.sh | bash, Windows irm https://claude.ai/install.ps1 | iex. Then claude --version to confirm, and sign in on first run.
This is the step people miss, so here it is precisely. Claude Code always works “inside” one folder, and all the OS features only exist when that folder is the one it's opened in.
cd then drag the job-search-os folder onto the terminal window (it fills in the path), press Enter, then type claude.
In your first session, type /start and press Enter. The course takes over from there: it introduces itself, checks your setup, and guides you through everything one step at a time. You never need to come back to this page unless something breaks.
cd into it, then claude). Not sure where you are? Ask Claude “which folder am I in?” If the OS commands don't appear when you type /, you're in the wrong folder.
Hit a snag, found something confusing, or landed interviews with this? Tell me. I read everything and the OS gets better because of it.