Using AI to Detect and Eliminate Redundant Phrases in Your Resume
A resume that repeats the same idea in multiple bullet points or sections not only wastes valuable space but also confuses applicant tracking systems (ATS). Redundant phrases dilute impact, lower readability scores, and can cause your application to be filtered out. In this guide weâll explore how artificial intelligence can automatically detect and eliminate those repeats, turning a wordy draft into a crisp, recruiterâready document.
Why Redundancy hurts your job prospects
- ATS penalties â Many ATS algorithms score resumes based on keyword variety. Repeating the same phrase reduces the diversity of terms the system sees, lowering the match percentage.
- Human fatigue â Recruiters skim 200+ resumes per opening. Duplicate language forces them to read the same point multiple times, increasing the chance they skip over you.
- Lost real estate â Every extra word is a missed opportunity to showcase another skill, achievement, or metric.
Stat: A 2023 study by Jobscan found that resumes with more than 15% duplicate phrasing saw a 22% drop in interview callbacks.
How AI identifies redundant language
Modern language models (LLMs) and specialized parsers analyze sentence structure, synonyms, and context. They can:
- Cluster similar bullet points based on semantic similarity scores.
- Highlight exact phrase repeats (e.g., "managed a team of 5" appearing in three sections).
- Suggest alternative verbs to diversify action words.
- Score readability using metrics like FleschâKincaid, which correlates with ATS success.
Resumlyâs Buzzword Detector and Resume Readability Test are two free tools that perform these analyses instantly. Try them here: https://www.resumly.ai/buzzword-detector and https://www.resumly.ai/resume-readability-test.
Stepâbyâstep guide: Using AI to clean up redundancy
1. Upload your draft to an AIâpowered analyzer
- Go to the Buzzword Detector page.
- Dragâandâdrop your PDF or paste plain text.
- Click Analyze.
The tool returns a list of repeated phrases, highlighted in yellow, and a similarity score for each bullet.
2. Review the AI suggestions
| Section | Repeated Phrase | Suggested Action |
|---|---|---|
| Experience â Marketing | "Developed and executed" (appears 3Ă) | Replace two instances with "Led" and "Implemented" |
| Experience â Sales | "Exceeded quota" (appears 2Ă) | Keep one, rephrase the other as "Surpassed sales targets" |
| Skills | "Proficient in Microsoft Office" (appears in Summary & Skills) | Remove from Summary, keep in Skills list |
3. Apply the changes manually or let the AI rewrite
Resumlyâs AI Resume Builder can autoâreplace duplicates while preserving your voice. Click AutoâRewrite on the suggestion panel, review the output, and accept the edits you like.
4. Run a readability check
After cleaning, run the Resume Readability Test. Aim for a score above 60 (plain English). If the score drops, consider simplifying complex sentences introduced during the rewrite.
5. Validate with an ATS simulator
Upload the revised resume to the ATS Resume Checker. Ensure the match rate improves (target > 80%). If the match is still low, revisit the duplicate list â sometimes hidden repeats remain in the âAchievementsâ section.
Checklist: RedundancyâFree Resume
- No exact phrase appears more than once across all sections.
- Action verbs are varied (e.g., led, created, optimized, spearheaded).
- Each bullet quantifies impact with a unique metric.
- Summary paragraph introduces core value proposition without echoing bullet points.
- Skills list contains only distinct tools/technologies.
- Readability score > 60.
- ATS match rate > 80% on the checker tool.
Doâs and Donâts
Do:
- Use AI tools to surface hidden repeats.
- Replace duplicates with synonyms or combine related achievements into a single, stronger bullet.
- Keep the most impressive metric and discard weaker repetitions.
Donât:
- Overârewrite to the point of losing authenticity.
- Remove all repeated language; some repetition of core competencies is acceptable if phrased differently.
- Ignore the ATS score after making changes â a higher match rate confirms the edits helped.
Realâworld case study
Background: Maria, a project manager with 7 years of experience, submitted a 2âpage resume that repeatedly used the phrase âmanaged crossâfunctional teams.â
AI analysis: The Buzzword Detector flagged the phrase 5 times, giving a redundancy score of 23%.
Action: Using the AI Resume Builder, Maria merged three bullets into one concise statement:
"Led crossâfunctional teams of 8â12 members to deliver $3M software projects on time, achieving a 15% cost reduction."
She removed the remaining two instances and added a new bullet highlighting stakeholder communication.
Result: After running the ATS checker, her match rate rose from 68% to 86%, and she secured interviews at three Fortune 500 firms.
Integrating redundancy removal into your workflow
- Draft your resume in a plainâtext editor or Google Docs.
- Run the Buzzword Detector before polishing.
- Apply AI rewrite for flagged items.
- Crossâcheck with the Readability Test and ATS Checker.
- Finalize using the AI Cover Letter feature to ensure consistent language across documents (link: https://www.resumly.ai/features/ai-cover-letter).
By making redundancy detection a routine step, you turn a manual, errorâprone task into a quick, dataâdriven process.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1: Will AI delete important keywords that recruiters look for? A: No. The AI only flags exact repeats. It preserves unique industry terms and can even suggest adding missing keywords based on the job description.
Q2: How many times can a phrase appear before itâs considered redundant? A: Generally, more than once across different sections is a red flag. If the phrase appears in the Summary and again in Experience, rewrite one instance.
Q3: Can I use the AI tools for free? A: Yes. The Buzzword Detector, Resume Readability Test, and ATS Resume Checker are free. For deeper personalization, consider the premium AI Resume Builder.
Q4: Does removing redundancy affect the length of my resume? A: It often shortens the document, freeing space for additional achievements or a concise summary.
Q5: How does AI handle synonyms? A: The model groups semantically similar verbs (e.g., "managed" vs. "oversaw") and suggests alternatives to increase variety.
Q6: Is the AI safe for confidential information? A: Resumly processes data in encrypted transit and does not store personal content after analysis.
Q7: Can I integrate this process with the Chrome Extension? A: Absolutely. The Chrome Extension can scan LinkedIn profiles and suggest redundancy fixes on the fly (link: https://www.resumly.ai/features/chrome-extension).
Miniâconclusion
Using AI to Detect and Eliminate Redundant Phrases in Your Resume transforms a cluttered draft into a focused, ATSâfriendly narrative. By following the stepâbyâstep guide, leveraging free tools, and adhering to the checklist, you boost readability, improve match scores, and increase interview callbacks.
Ready to supercharge your resume? Visit the Resumly AI Resume Builder to apply these techniques automatically and explore other features like AutoâApply and Job Match for a complete jobâsearch automation experience.
This article was crafted by Jane Smith, senior content strategist at Resumly. For more careerâbuilding resources, explore the Resumly Career Guide and our Blog.










