Why this exists

A note for the writer making the case, on what reecv is for, who it's for, and what it costs.

01

What this is

The case for the role you actually want

The resume tools available all sounded the same. The same verbs, the same headings, the same urgency about getting picked. The optimization vocabulary became the product, and the writer started sounding like the form.

reecv is built around one application at a time. The resume you draft on is the resume the reader receives, no marketing-only mockup behind the curtain, no template-mill, no score. In your own words, on a resume that reads.

02

What this isn't

Not a mill, not a score, not a pitch

  • Not a mill

    Built for one application that's finished, not a hundred sprayed at listings.

  • Not a score

    No number grades the resume; the resume grades itself by what a careful reader keeps.

  • Not a pitch

    The resume is the case for the work, not the marketing for it.

The mechanism under the floorboards is AI, used as a careful editor would be used: to draft, to refine, to read the resume back to the writer in plain terms. The message on the resume is the work.

A page you can read aloud and recognize.

03

Who it's for

Three stances, one approach

Same product, three postures. The copy meets the writer where they are.

  • Proving

    New in role, function, or career, making the case for the first time.

  • Pivoting

    Changing role, function, or industry, reframing the record without rewriting the past.

  • Protecting

    Already has the record, refining a single application without redoing the whole thing.

04

What it costs

Draft tier is free; paid plans tailor

Draft
Free
One application, made the right way.
Active
$9.99/mo
For an active job search.
Studio
$14.99/mo
Tailored, refined, kept.

A plain monthly price; cancel any month. The pricing page has the full feature table.

A note in the margin

A resume isn't a pitch and it isn't a story. It asks the reader to take you seriously for a few minutes, and the writer's job is to make those minutes worth it. Most pages aren't too long; they're too loud. Sit with the draft. Read it aloud. Cut what isn't evidence. Keep what is.

Drew White

Founder · Editor

Make the case for the work you actually want

Join the waitlist

Free to draft once you're in. No card on file.