Application Tracking
By week three the spreadsheet is a lie. You applied to something on a Tuesday and never logged it. A recruiter replied and it slid under a newsletter. Two companies asked for availability and you answered one. Nothing here is difficult, but it is relentless, and it fails silently — the opportunity you lose to a forgotten follow-up looks exactly like the opportunity you lose to a rejection, so you never learn from it.
Skynet holds the whole thing. Connected to your email, it sees the confirmations, the rejections, and the interview requests, and keeps the picture current without you maintaining it. When a thread has been quiet too long, it says so and drafts the nudge — one line, sent by you.
How it works
Log applications as you go
Send the agent the posting, or forward the confirmation email. It records the company, role, date, and where you are in the process.
Let it watch the inbox
Connected to your mail, it picks up replies and moves each application forward on its own — rejection, screen scheduled, offer. The status stays true without you touching it.
Catch the silence
Applied ten days ago with nothing back? Recruiter said they would follow up on Friday and it is Wednesday? The agent surfaces those instead of letting them fade.
Approve the nudge
It writes the follow-up — short, specific, not needy — and waits for you. Nothing sends without your say-so.
Build it from a prompt
Set the rules once and stop maintaining a spreadsheet.
The searches that work are usually not the ones with the best resume — they are the ones that stayed organised for four months. This is the part of the job search that is pure overhead, and it is the part an agent should be doing.