How I Got My Resume Shortlisted at Amazon

If you’ve ever applied to a big tech company like Amazon, you know the competition is intense. Hundreds sometimes thousands of resumes compete for the same role. The trick isn’t just having great skills it’s also about presenting them in a way that both recruiters and Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) can understand.
That’s how I stumbled upon a method that helped get my resume shortlisted by creating an ATS-friendly LaTeX resume on Overleaf.
Why Keywords Matter
Most large companies use ATS software to filter resumes before a human ever sees them. If your resume doesn’t contain the right keywords for the role, it may never reach a recruiter.
Here’s what I did:
Carefully read the job description.
Highlighted skills, tools, and action verbs that matched my background.
Incorporated these keywords naturally into my work experience, skills, and summary sections.
Step 1 – Convert Your Resume to LaTeX
I already had a resume in Word/PDF, but it wasn’t optimized for ATS.
Instead of retyping everything from scratch, I used ChatGPT (you can use any AI tool) to convert my resume into LaTeX format.
Why LaTeX?
Produces clean, structured, machine-readable resumes.
Many professional ATS-friendly templates exist.
Looks elegant and consistent when printed or viewed digitally.
Step 2 – Open Overleaf
Go to Overleaf.com.
Sign in or create a free account.
Click New Project → Blank Project.
Paste the LaTeX code generated by ChatGPT (or your preferred AI tool) into the editor.
Step 3 – Compile Your Resume
Click the “Recompile” button, and Overleaf will instantly generate your polished ATS-ready PDF resume.
From there, download it and start applying.
Step 4 – Apply with Confidence
With this version of my resume:
My skills were properly keyword-optimized.
The formatting was ATS-compliant (no fancy tables or images that confuse parsing systems).
The layout looked professional and minimalistic, ideal for recruiters.
Within days of applying to Amazon, I got the shortlisting email.
Final Tips
Don’t keyword-stuff. Recruiters can spot this instantly.
Use bullet points and clear section headings.
Keep your resume one page if possible.
Regularly update your LaTeX template with your latest achievements.
Conclusion:
If you’ve been sending resumes without hearing back, the problem might not be your skills it might be your formatting. Using Overleaf + LaTeX + keyword optimization turned out to be a game-changer for me. It’s worth the extra 30 minutes to give your application the best possible shot.
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