Short answer
A useful AI Builder profile says what workflows you build, which tools you use, what evidence supports the claim, when you can start, and which roles or projects are not a fit.
- Know what projects, tools, and boundaries your profile should make clear.
- Help employers understand which roles fit you faster.
- Avoid broad claims that cannot be checked.
Use this page for
Turn ability into screenable proof
The point is not to list everything. Make it clear what you owned, what you can deliver, and which evidence needs protection.
Start
Decision context
Decision criteria
The headline maps to real case evidence.
Next action
Create Builder profile
Decision context
The profile should help employers self-select. Make your best-fit workflows obvious and show evidence before asking them to request deeper materials.
Evidence to inspect
Use concrete tools, deliverables, case summaries, availability, role preferences, remote status, and boundaries around private material.
Boundary and next step
Keep the public profile credible but not overexposed. Put sensitive resumes, contact details, and client materials behind the appropriate access boundary.
What you still need to confirm yourself
- Confirm whether the role scope, budget, timeline, and communication expectations fit you.
- Decide what client names, screenshots, files, or personal details should stay private.
- Use interviews or written follow-up to clarify responsibility, contract terms, and data access before starting work.
Check current rules before acting
Use these links to confirm what the platform currently supports. Then decide whether to browse, post, contact, or adjust evidence.
Decision criteria
Common mistakes
- Writing a generic AI expert summary.
- Making every tool sound like a core strength.