Apply 📨
Everything you need to actually apply — to schools and to jobs — in one place. Draft it, get warm coaching, and keep track of what's due. This is guidance, not a guarantee — the words stay yours.
Essays, your application checklist, and the people writing for you.
Your draft is saved on this device so you can come back to it. We never grade you — this is here to help you say what you mean.
Tip: ask at least three to four weeks before the deadline, and give them a short note on what you're proud of — it makes their letter stronger.
Your résumé, interview practice, and cover letters — for jobs, internships, and apprenticeships.
It's normal to feel like you're bragging — you're not. You're telling them why you'd be good at this. We'll help you do it plainly.
Everything here stays on your device. Money matters, but it isn't everything — weigh the whole picture: how you'll grow, the benefits, the people, and where you'd be living.
Almost everyone can ask, and most employers expect it — asking politely won't cost you the offer. A few plain steps:
- Say thank you first. "I'm really excited about this — thank you for the offer."
- Ask, don't demand. "Is there any flexibility on the base salary?" is enough. You don't need a hard number to start.
- Look at the whole package, not just pay — signing bonus, health coverage, paid training, schedule, time off, and how soon you can grow.
- It's fine to take a day. "Could I have a day to think it over?" is a normal, professional thing to ask.
There's no wrong way to ask a respectful question. The worst they say is "this is our best offer" — and you're no worse off than before.