For most technical graduates, the hardest part of landing a first job isn't the coding test. It's the sixty seconds before anyone speaks to them: the moment a recruiter, or more often a piece of software, scans their CV and decides whether a human will ever see it.
That filter is brutal in South Africa's graduate market, where entry-level tech roles routinely attract hundreds of applicants. Applicant tracking systems (ATS) reject CVs for reasons that have nothing to do with ability: two-column layouts that parse out of order, headers the software can't read, graphics where text should be. A graduate can finish a demanding bootcamp with a strong portfolio and still be filtered out by formatting.
It's this gap, between being job-ready and looking job-ready on paper, that a new partnership between Cape Town-based coding bootcamp Zaio and resume platform Rejectless is trying to close.
The templates recruiters already trust
Ask engineers on Reddit's r/EngineeringResumes which CV format to use and two names come up again and again: Jake's Resume Template, the single-column LaTeX format that has become the de facto standard for software roles, and the Harvard resume format, the education-first layout that dominates finance, consulting and corporate recruiting.
The catch is that these templates were never designed for ordinary users. Jake's original lives in LaTeX, a typesetting language most non-engineers have never touched, and even Harvard's official version is a Word document that famously breaks its own formatting when opened on a different machine.
Rejectless's approach is to rebuild these community-standard templates as free browser editors: the same fonts, spacing and layout, editable like a form, exported as a clean PDF. Alongside Jake's template and the Harvard format, the platform offers the Deedy and AwesomeCV templates popular with developers, and the Wall Street Oasis format used in investment banking. All of them are free, and notably, none of them stamp a watermark on the exported PDF, something most resume builders still do on their free tiers.
That last detail matters more than it sounds. A watermark on a CV reads as a red flag to conservative recruiters and as stray text to ATS software. "A graduate's CV should look exactly like the template a hiring manager expects to see, not like an advert for the tool that made it," says Thejus, founder of Rejectless.
The new problem: CVs that sound like nobody
Formatting is no longer the only filter graduates have to survive. Recruiters are now wading through a flood of AI-generated CVs, and they have learned to spot them. The same inflated verbs, the same vague claims of "spearheading" and "leveraging", the same bullet points that could belong to anyone. When every application sounds like the same chatbot, the candidates who actually did the work get buried alongside those who didn't.
The worst outcome isn't rejection. It's the interview where a candidate is asked to walk through a bullet point on their own CV and can't, because they didn't write it and never really thought about it.
Rejectless takes a deliberately contrarian position here. Instead of generating bullets for the user, its feedback engine critiques what the graduate has written and makes them do the rewriting themselves. It flags weak phrasing, missing numbers and unverifiable claims, then asks the candidate to justify each point: what did you actually do, what changed because of it, how would you defend this if a recruiter pushed back?
"We won't write your CV for you, and that's the point," says Thejus. "If you can't explain a bullet on your own CV, it shouldn't be there. The rewriting process is interview prep in disguise. By the time a graduate finishes, every line is something they can stand behind in a room."
In a market getting noisier with machine-written applications, it's a bet that the advantage is shifting back to candidates whose CVs sound like an actual person who did actual work.
What the partnership changes for graduates
Under the partnership, announced on Zaio's blog, graduates build their CVs on the proven formats as part of their job-readiness process, working through that feedback loop before a single application goes out: fixing weak bullet points, adding quantification, and resolving ATS parsing issues.
For Zaio, whose model is built on getting graduates hired rather than just certified, the logic is straightforward: interview skills don't matter if the CV never survives the first filter. For a cohort applying into both local and international remote roles, using the exact formats that overseas recruiters already recognise removes one more disadvantage.
The bigger picture
There's a quiet shift underneath this story. The best resume formats are no longer being invented by resume companies. They're community standards, open-source templates argued over on Reddit and GitHub until they converge on what actually works. And as AI floods the top of the hiring funnel, the tools winning graduate trust are the ones helping candidates sound more like themselves, not less.
For South African graduates entering one of the toughest first-job markets anywhere, that isn't a convenience. It's the difference between being seen and being filtered out.


















