Lesson 850 of 2116
Writing Your Own Pivot Story — Resume, LinkedIn, Interview Answer
The single most important sentence in your pivot is the answer to 'so why are you doing this?' Here's how to draft it and how to use it everywhere.
Lesson map
What this lesson covers
Learning path
The main moves in order
- 1Why the story matters more than the resume
- 2narrative
- 3story
- 4elevator pitch
Concept cluster
Terms to connect while reading
Section 1
Why the story matters more than the resume
Hiring managers read 30 resumes for a role. They remember 2-3 stories. The pivoter who can tell a clean, calm, specific story about why they're doing this has already won most of the air-time. The pivoter who can't, hasn't.
The 4-sentence template
Real examples
- 'I've been a litigation paralegal for 18 years. Two years ago I started watching AI tools handle in 5 minutes what used to take me 5 hours. I've spent the last 9 months building prompt libraries for legal-research workflows and just shipped my first internal tool. I'm trying to land a Legal AI Operations role at a mid-sized firm or in-house legal team — that's where domain depth still matters.'
- 'I worked in newsrooms for 22 years, mostly investigative. AI killed the bottom of the writing market and supercharged the research side. I've been quietly using NotebookLM and Claude for 14 months on real reporting projects, and now I want to help an AI-native research or fact-checking startup turn that craft into product. I'm a researcher trapped in a journalist's resume.'
Use it everywhere
- LinkedIn About — paragraph 1
- Resume summary at top — distilled to 2 lines
- Cold email opener — sentences 2-3
- Recruiter call opener — all 4 sentences in 30 seconds
- Interview 'why are you here' answer — all 4 plus 1 specific anecdote
Key terms in this lesson
The big idea: the pivot is real once you can say it in 4 sentences without flinching. Until then, it's still under construction.
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