Check Your Resume Before You Apply

Most employers use software (an ATS) to read and rank resumes. See your score and fix it. Free, no signup to check.

Electronx
Head of Risk
Chicago

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How it works

Key Takeaways

  • Automated hiring systems can screen or route resumes before human review; ResumeGeni treats ATS scoring as parser-readiness triage, not a hiring prediction (Harvard Business School & Accenture).
  • The most common ATS-readiness problems are missing keywords, incompatible formatting, incomplete fields, and incorrect file types
  • ResumeGeni scores parseability, structure, contact fields, content completeness, skills, and keyword signals, then explains the evidence behind the score

How ATS Resume Scoring Works

Applicant tracking systems parse your resume into structured data — extracting your name, contact info, work history, skills, and education — then use that data in search, review, and matching workflows. Parsing gaps can make a qualified candidate harder to evaluate.

LayerWhat It ChecksWhy It Matters
Document extractionFile format, encoding, readabilityCorrupted or image-only PDFs fail immediately
Layout analysisTables, columns, headers, footersMulti-column layouts break field extraction
Section detectionExperience, education, skills headingsNon-standard headings cause sections to be missed
Field mappingName, email, phone, dates, titlesMissing contact info is a common cause of immediate rejection
Keyword signalsJob-specific terms, skills, certificationsKeyword overlap can affect recruiter search visibility and resume-review workflows
Chronology checkDate ordering, gap detectionReverse-chronological order is expected by most ATS
QuantificationMetrics, numbers, measurable outcomesQuantified achievements help human reviewers and some scoring models
Confidence scoringOverall parse quality and completenessLow-confidence extraction means important fields may need manual review

What ResumeGeni Checks Before Keyword Matching

Keyword matching only helps after the resume can be read cleanly. ResumeGeni starts with parser-readiness signals before it evaluates wording, skills, and role fit.

  • Readable text: whether the uploaded file exposes selectable text instead of only a scanned image.
  • Standard resume structure: whether contact, summary, work experience, education, and skills sections are easy to identify.
  • Field extraction: whether names, email addresses, phone numbers, employers, titles, dates, degrees, and skills can be mapped into stable fields.
  • Format risk: whether tables, columns, text boxes, decorative icons, headers, footers, or unusual bullets could interrupt parsing.
  • Evidence quality: whether experience bullets include scope, tools, metrics, and outcomes rather than generic duty lists.
  • Keyword coverage: whether relevant tools, certifications, industry terms, and role-specific phrases appear naturally in the resume.

What Your ATS Score Means

The score is a diagnostic signal, not a hiring guarantee. A high score means ResumeGeni can extract and evaluate the resume with fewer warnings. A low score means the resume likely needs structural fixes before keyword tuning matters.

Score RangeReadBest Next Action
90-100Strong parser readiness with few visible gapsTailor keywords and achievements to the target role
75-89Generally readable, but some sections or evidence may be weakFix warnings, add measurable achievements, and tighten skills
60-74Important content may be missing, vague, or hard to mapRepair structure before rewriting bullets
Below 60Parsing or completeness issues are likely holding the resume backMove to a cleaner format and rebuild core sections first

What To Fix First

Start with problems that prevent a system or recruiter from reading the resume. Save small wording changes for after the structure is clean.

PriorityFixReason
1Use a text-based PDF, DOCX, or plain text resumeImage-only files and corrupted exports cannot be reliably parsed
2Use one column and standard headingsPredictable structure improves section and field detection
3Put contact information in the body, not only the headerSome parsers ignore header and footer regions
4Replace vague duties with quantified achievementsSpecific outcomes help both recruiter review and scoring evidence
5Mirror role language truthfullyRelevant keywords help search and review without keyword stuffing

How To Use the Score Without Overfitting

The best use of an ATS score is triage. Fix problems that make the resume hard to parse or hard to evaluate, then stop when the document is clear. Do not chase a perfect score by adding keywords you cannot defend in an interview or by turning every bullet into a list of tools.

Checker signalGood correctionCorrection to avoid
Low parse confidenceMove to a single-column layout, standard headings, and selectable text.Adding more keywords before the resume can be read cleanly.
Weak evidence bulletsRewrite duties into scope, action, tool, and measurable outcome.Inflating impact numbers or copying sample bullets that do not match your work.
Missing role termsAdd truthful tools, certifications, patient loads, stack details, or workflows from your experience.Keyword stuffing a skills section with technologies you have not used.
Thin company fitCompare the resume with the target role and company application guide before applying.Submitting the same generic version to every employer.

Methodology And Limits

ResumeGeni checks format, extraction, content completeness, and keyword signals from the uploaded resume. It does not certify that every employer ATS will parse the file the same way, and it does not predict whether a recruiter will interview you.

For the scoring rubric, privacy notes, and limitations, read the ATS Resume Checker Methodology. For the broader source map behind ResumeGeni guidance, use the research hub and dated research data dashboard. For application context, use the exact company application guide or role guide that matches the job.

What the Checker Can Diagnose

Treat the ATS resume checker as a document-readiness diagnostic, not a hiring prediction. A useful check should tell you whether the resume text can be extracted, whether the major sections are recognizable, whether contact fields are present, whether bullets contain evidence, and whether role language appears naturally enough for a reviewer to understand the match.

Diagnostic areaWhat ResumeGeni looks forBest correction
Text extractionSelectable text, readable file structure, and parser confidence.Use a text-based PDF, DOCX, or pasted text version before changing wording.
Section recognitionStandard headings for contact, summary, experience, education, skills, projects, and certifications.Rename creative headings to conventional resume sections and keep content in the document body.
Evidence qualityBullets with scope, action, tools, and measurable outcomes rather than generic duties.Rewrite the most recent role first, then work backward through older experience.
Role alignmentTruthful keywords, credentials, systems, technologies, and responsibilities that match the target role.Compare the resume with a role guide and a real posting before adding or removing terms.

Pair the Score With a Role Guide

An ATS score is the starting point. After the resume is readable, compare it with the role you are targeting so your skills, bullets, and keywords match the actual posting without keyword stuffing.

Resume pathUse this guide when the checker flagsBest next page
ClinicalMissing license, certification, patient-load, unit, EHR, or care-outcome evidenceRN resume guide
TechnicalThin stack detail, unclear shipped features, missing testing, deployment, or performance evidenceFull-stack developer resume guide or Android developer resume guide
PortfolioCase studies, client scope, shipped work, project outcomes, or collaboration signals are too vagueProduct designer resume guide or Freelancer resume guide
People operationsHRIS, compliance, hiring, retention, employee-relations, or policy examples are missingHuman resources manager resume guide

Where This Checker Fits in the Application Path

Use the checker as a diagnostic gate between drafting and applying. It is strongest when the next action is specific: fix parsing risks, rewrite vague bullets, add missing role evidence, or compare the resume against a real posting. It is weaker when treated as a hiring predictor or a substitute for role judgment.

Signal from the checkerBest next pageReason
Formatting or parsing warningsATS compatibility methodologyReview the scoring categories and limits before changing the file structure.
Weak or generic experience bulletsResume guides by job titleFind role-specific examples and replace duties with evidence, scope, and outcomes.
Missing tools, systems, or certificationsSkills guides by job titleCheck which skills belong in the resume and which should appear only when truthful.
Company-specific application concernsCompany application guidesCompare employer context, ATS signals, and open-role language before final tailoring.

Sources Used For This Checker

ResumeGeni's checker combines product analysis with public resume-writing, occupational, and structured-data references. These sources inform parser-readiness guidance; they do not certify that any employer or ATS vendor will score a resume the same way.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is ResumeGeni free?
Yes. ATS analysis, scoring, and initial improvement suggestions are free with no signup required. Full guidance and saved reports may require a free account.
What file formats are supported?
PDF, DOCX, DOC, TXT, RTF, ODT, and Apple Pages. PDF and DOCX are recommended for best ATS compatibility.
How is the ATS score calculated?
Your resume is parsed into structured fields such as contact information, experience, education, and skills. The score reflects how cleanly ResumeGeni can extract those fields plus format, content, and keyword signals.
Can ATS read PDF resumes?
Yes, but not all PDFs are equal. Text-based PDFs parse well. Image-only PDFs (scanned documents) and PDFs with complex tables or multi-column layouts often fail ATS parsing. Our analyzer will flag these issues.
How do I improve my ATS score?
Focus on three areas: use a clean single-column format, include keywords from the job description naturally in your experience bullets, and ensure all sections (contact, experience, education, skills) use standard headings.

Preferred ATS Checker Resource Spine

Built by ResumeGeni. Methodology, sources, and limitations are documented above. Last updated .

Head of Risk

Electronx · Chicago

Who are we?


ElectronX™ is the first U.S.-regulated, direct access electricity derivatives market, offering financial products to address volatile short-term price exposure to electricity. With offices in Chicago and New York City, ElectronX is building the missing financial infrastructure and risk management tools necessary to smooth the path for U.S. energy production, diversification and grid expansion in a time of rapidly increasing power demand.

ElectronX is a venture capital-backed startup supported by premier VC partners including Innovation Endeavors, Systemiq Capital, Equinor Ventures, Shell Ventures LLC, DCVC, Amplo, BoxGroup and Lightning Capital.

Who are we looking for?


As a fast-growing company in the highly competitive, quantitative capital markets industry, ElectronX values candidates who are resourceful, curious and adaptable to change. Our cultural focus on innovation requires collaborative and entrepreneurial teammates with the intellectual grit necessary for near- and long-term success.

ElectronX is building a CFTC-regulated Derivatives Clearing Organization from the ground up, and risk management is the backbone of everything we do. As we expand across all U.S. ISOs and transition to margin-based trading, we need a Head of Risk who can design the enterprise risk framework that makes it all possible. This role works in close partnership with and in support of ElectronX’s Chief Risk Officer to build and execute that framework.

This isn’t a role where you inherit a risk program and maintain it. You’re building it. You’ll define how ElectronX thinks about risk across every dimension: market, credit, counterparty, operational, and liquidity. You’ll set the risk appetite for a fast-growing exchange, stand up the monitoring and surveillance infrastructure, and make sure we’re not just compliant but ahead of where regulators are going.

The right person has seen risk management done well at established institutions and knows what to take from that experience and what to leave behind. You want to build a risk function that’s modern, quantitative, and designed for the speed and complexity of energy markets.

What will you be doing?

Enterprise Risk Framework

  • Own the end-to-end risk management framework for the exchange and DCO.

  • Define the enterprise risk appetite and tolerance statement.

  • Build the risk governance structure including policies, procedures, and escalation frameworks.

  • Establish risk reporting to the Board, regulators, and senior leadership.

  • Develop and chair the Risk Committee.

Market & Credit Risk

  • Design and oversee margin model validation, stress testing, and back-testing programs.

  • Manage counterparty credit risk assessment and ongoing monitoring for clearing members.

  • Develop position limits, concentration risk policies, and large trader surveillance.

  • Build default fund sizing methodologies and maintain the default waterfall.

  • Own recovery and resolution planning.

Operational & Liquidity Risk

  • Stand up the operational risk program covering technology risk, business continuity, and third-party risk management.

  • Build real-time risk monitoring and surveillance systems that can scale with 24x7 trading.

  • Manage liquidity risk including liquidity stress testing and contingency funding planning.

  • Establish robust financial controls for wire processing, cash reconciliation, and treasury operations.

  • Ensure full compliance with customer funds segregation and protection requirements.

Regulatory

  • Serve as the primary risk liaison with the CFTC and other regulatory bodies.

  • Lead risk-related regulatory filings, rule submissions, and examination readiness.

  • Ensure compliance with CFTC Part 39 requirements around risk management, financial resources, and default procedures.

  • Stay ahead of evolving regulatory expectations and proactively adapt the risk framework.

Team & Stakeholders

  • Build and lead a high-performing risk management team.

  • Collaborate closely with compliance and finance on margin model design and clearing risk integration, and work cross-functionally with engineering, product, and commercial teams to embed risk thinking into business decisions.

  • Manage relationships with regulators, clearing members, and industry risk bodies.

  • Represent ElectronX in industry risk forums and working groups.

What we need from you

Technical Acumen

  • 10+ years in risk management at an exchange, CCP, FCM, or major financial institution.

  • Deep expertise in derivatives risk including margin, default management, and systemic risk.

  • Proven track record building or significantly transforming a risk function, not just maintaining one.

  • Strong regulatory relationship management, ideally with the CFTC or equivalent bodies.

  • Experience with enterprise risk governance, Board-level risk reporting, and risk committee leadership.

  • Expert quantitative skills in risk modeling, VaR, stress testing, scenario analysis, and back-testing.

  • Deep understanding of margin methodologies including SPAN, VaR-based, and historical simulation approaches.

  • Experience with real-time risk monitoring systems and surveillance technology.

  • Ability to translate risk requirements into technical specifications and work effectively with engineering teams.

The Right Mindset

  • Frameworks first: You think in frameworks, not checklists.

  • Practical rigor: You’re someone who builds risk programs that are robust enough to satisfy regulators and practical enough that the business actually uses them.

  • Rigor with speed: You balance rigor with speed because you understand that in a startup, waiting for perfection means falling behind.

  • Clear communicator: You’re a clear communicator who can make risk concepts accessible to the Board, to engineers, and to commercial teams.

  • Builder mentality: You want to build something from scratch and put your stamp on it.

Nice to Have

  • FRM, PRM, CFA, or equivalent certification.

  • Experience in energy or commodity risk management.

  • Background at a DCO or CCP during a launch or major expansion phase.

  • Knowledge of real-time payments, digital asset risk, or emerging market infrastructure.

  • Established relationships within the clearing and risk management community.

  • Experience with international risk frameworks and cross-border regulatory coordination.

Benefits

  • Health, vision and dental insurance

  • 401(k) match

  • Supplemental health and disability insurance

  • Unlimited vacation

  • Parental leave

Equal Opportunity Statement:

ElectronX is an equal opportunity employer. We celebrate diversity and are committed to creating an inclusive environment for all employees. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, religion, color, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, age, non-disqualifying physical or mental disability, national origin, veteran status, or any other basis covered by appropriate law. All employment is decided on the basis of qualifications, merit, and business need.

This position is not eligible for immigration sponsorship.