How to Create an AI-Verified Professional Profile in 60 Seconds
Resumes have been broken for a long time, and most people know it. You sit down, open a blank document, and start performing. You pick the right verbs. You inflate your job titles. You describe projects in the most favorable light possible. Then someone on the other end reads it and has no idea what's real.
That's been the deal for decades: you write about yourself, and everyone agrees to pretend it's objective.
But something changed. If you've been using ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini for the past year, your AI has been quietly building a record of what you actually do. Every question you ask, every problem you work through, every project you debug at 2 AM — it's all there. Not in a resume format, not polished for a recruiter, but real.
Why Resumes Fail in 2026
Resumes are self-reported. That's the core problem. You decide what to include, how to frame it, and what to leave out. There's no verification, no cross-reference, no way for a reader to know if "Led a team of 12 engineers" means you managed a department or just got CC'd on emails.
They're also performative. Nobody writes a resume in their natural voice. You switch into a weird third-person corporate dialect that doesn't sound like any actual human. "Spearheaded cross-functional initiatives to drive stakeholder alignment." What does that even mean?
And they're static. You write a resume, and it sits there. It doesn't update when you learn a new framework over a weekend. It doesn't capture the hobby project you're obsessed with. It shows a frozen version of someone you used to be.
Your AI Conversation History Is the New Proof
Here's what's different now: you have a witness. Your AI assistant has watched you work. It knows what languages you code in because you asked it to debug your code. It knows your thinking style because it watched you reason through architecture decisions. It knows your side projects because you spent three weekends asking it about drone firmware.
This isn't self-reported. It's observed. There's a massive difference between "I'm skilled in Python" on a resume and an AI that can say "This person asked me 47 questions about Python async patterns while building a real-time data pipeline."
How to Create Your BeKnown Profile
The whole process takes about 60 seconds. Here's exactly what happens:
What Your Profile Includes
A BeKnown profile isn't a resume. It's structured differently because it captures different things:
- Skills with evidence — Not just "React" but "Built three production React apps, asked detailed questions about server components and state management patterns." The AI provides receipts.
- Thinking style — How you actually approach problems. Are you a first-principles thinker? Do you prototype fast and iterate? Do you research deeply before starting? Your AI has watched you do this hundreds of times.
- Projects — Things you actually built, with the tech stack and current status. Shipped, building, or exploring.
- Domains — Everything you do, not just your job title. Developer by day, music producer by night, marathon runner on weekends. The full picture.
- Learning patterns — How fast you pick things up, and how you learn. Some people read docs. Some people learn by breaking things. Your AI knows which one you are.
No Signup Required
BeKnown doesn't have accounts. There's no email collection, no password, no onboarding flow. You generate a profile and get a link. That's it. If you want to update it later, you generate a new one.
The goal is simple: give people a way to show who they actually are, verified by something other than their own word.