Identify the proof anchor
RoleProof finds the part that can carry the project: data flow, UI, backend, deployment, users, automation, or measurable usage.
Many students and career switchers describe projects like class assignments even when they built something real. RoleProof organizes the project around user problem, architecture, implementation choices, deployment, and proof an employer can inspect, then turns the gap into practical prompts for what to add next.
RoleProof Project Repair helps job seekers turn a weak project or work story into a stronger proof asset. It gives prompt-style directions for what to clarify, what artifact to add, what implementation details to surface, and how to connect the project to a target role without inventing false experience.
RoleProof gives job-search preparation signals for the resume, project, experience, and workflow artifacts you provide. It does not make employer decisions or submit applications for you.
Resume, project, work story, answer, or plan.
The project title is interesting, but the bullet does not explain implementation.
Make a project sound implemented, testable, and credible, then give the user a prompt for the missing proof.
RoleProof finds the part that can carry the project: data flow, UI, backend, deployment, users, automation, or measurable usage.
Normal repair clarifies truthful scope. A more aggressive version can help brainstorm a stronger founder-style story, but the user decides what is accurate to use.
The final output gives the user prompt-style instructions for improving the project, adding proof, and preparing the story for resumes or interviews.
Make a project sound implemented, testable, and credible, then give the user a prompt for the missing proof.
A polished paragraph or bullet set that explains user problem, implementation, deployment, and outcome.
Specific artifacts to add before applying: screenshots, README, demo link, metrics, seed users, tests, or deployment notes.
A short prompt for the next proof asset plus tradeoffs, architecture, and follow-up points so the project can survive interview questions.
The repaired version gives the employer something to picture, inspect, and ask about.
Campus Pantry Finder - made a website that lists food pantry resources.
Built a deployed campus pantry finder with responsive web UI, searchable pantry/resource records, lightweight data update workflow, and clear mobile/desktop flows so students and campus partners could test the product from a live link.
It can show stronger directions and draft options, but you are responsible for only using details that are accurate, lawful, and defensible.
Small projects can still be strong if the resume explains the problem, implementation, tradeoffs, deployment, and what you learned or validated.
Yes. For non-tech roles, project repair becomes experience repair: a work story, client outcome, process improvement, safety record, sales motion, lesson plan, or operations result.
Add proof employers can inspect: live link, screenshots, README, measurable usage, before/after result, user feedback, or a short case-study note.