Performance reviews shouldn't require archaeology.
GitResume exists because your work should speak for itself, without you having to remember every detail.
The problem we kept running into
You're a strong developer. You ship features, fix critical bugs, lead migrations, mentor through code reviews. Then performance review season hits and your manager asks you to "summarize your impact this half." You stare at a blank doc.
Or worse, you get a new manager who has zero context on what you've done. A promotion opens up, but you can't articulate what you've shipped. Your resume is two years stale. A layoff catches you off guard and suddenly you need to prove your track record without access to the repos where you built it.
Scrolling through months of commits, cross-referencing PRs, trying to reconstruct what you actually did. It worked, but it took days. And nobody does it until they're already behind.
So we automated it
GitResume started as exactly that manual process: gathering commits and contribution data, distilling them into clear, evidence-backed summaries, and organizing them for whatever the moment required. It worked. It just shouldn't take a weekend.
Now it's a product. Connect your GitHub, and we analyze your actual contributions: commits, PRs, merge history. No guessing, no "I think I worked on that." Real data, structured and ready to use whenever you need it.
Monthly syncs keep everything current. So when the moment arrives — a promotion opening, a new opportunity, a surprise reorg — you're not scrambling. You're prepared. Your career stays documented whether you're paying attention to it or not.
Your work deserves better than a blank page and a deadline.
Five minutes to set up. Always current after that. Cancel anytime.
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