A senior engineering manager at a top tech company recently told me something that would terrify most job seekers:
"I haven't read a resume in two years. I look at GitHub profiles, blog posts, and side projects. If a candidate can't show me their work, I move on."
She's not alone. Across industries, the traditional resume — that carefully formatted one-page document listing job titles, dates, and bullet points — is losing its power as the primary hiring signal.
Why Resumes Are Dying
1. Resumes Are Terrible Predictors of Performance
Google's former SVP of People Operations, Laszlo Bock, analyzed decades of hiring data and concluded:
- GPA has zero correlation with job performance after 2 years out of school
- Interview performance has only a 14% correlation with on-the-job success
- Work sample tests have a 29% correlation — more than double
- Structured behavioral interviews reach 26%
Resumes tell you where someone has been. They tell you almost nothing about what they can actually do.
2. AI Made Resumes Unreliable
In 2026, anyone can generate a polished, keyword-optimized resume in 30 seconds with AI. This means:
- Every resume looks impressive — making it impossible to differentiate
- Keyword gaming is trivial — ATS (Applicant Tracking Systems) are easily fooled
- Fabrication detection is harder — AI-written bullet points sound plausible even when exaggerated
- Volume exploded — candidates apply to hundreds of jobs with AI-generated applications
The result: The average corporate job posting receives 250+ applications. Recruiters spend per resume. The signal-to-noise ratio is effectively zero.