I Hit “Apply” 142 Times—and Heard Back Twice

by Parviz SadikovJune 9th, 2025
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Student tired of internship ghosting builds a one-click Chrome extension that finds recruiters and sends follow-up emails—open-source help wanted.

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Last spring, I spent more nights on LinkedIn Jobs than on Netflix. One role even dragged me through four rounds of interviews before ghosting me completely.


Somehow, the bar keeps rising—referral? Video intro? Homework project?—and still we’re told “just follow up.” After the 30-hour week called “full-time recruiting,” I rarely had energy left to chase down recruiters’ emails, let alone write something thoughtful.


So, I built a shortcut for myself.


The Idea in Plain English

One click = one polite follow-up.

  • Click a little button in Chrome right after submitting an application.
  • The extension grabs the company name and role.
  • Behind the curtain, it drafts a short email and tries to find a real recruiter’s address.
  • If it finds one, it sends; if not, it gives me a copy-paste draft.


No tabs, no digging through Google, no wondering what to say.


What I Actually Did (Non-Engineer Edition)

  1. Googled “how to make a Chrome extension.” Copied the starter template, swapped icons, and added a textbox for my webhook link.


  2. Hooked it to Make.com. Think of Make as Lego blocks for the internet—drag this, drop that, tell it “when you see X, do Y.”


  3. Asked ChatGPT to write the email. Prompt: “In 120 words or less, polite, mention the job title, express genuine interest.”


  4. Pulled recruiter info from Apollo. Free tier—best thing for a student budget.


  5. Tested on myself. It worked.


Why Bother Following Up Anyway?

  • Silence ≠ rejection. Recruiters sift through hundreds of apps; the polite ping helps them remember you.
  • It shows you care. If two candidates look equal on paper, the one who reaches out usually wins.
  • It builds a real contact list. Even if you don’t land this role, you now know a human at that company.

Honest Lessons (So Far)

  • Friction kills good intentions. If I have to copy-paste anything, I’ll put it off until “tomorrow,” which never comes.
  • Side projects are therapy. Shipping something—even half-baked—felt better than refreshing my inbox for the 100th time.

What’s Next (After I Catch My Breath)

  • Clean UI, no setup screens (my friends will never paste a webhook, and I can’t blame them).
  • Toggle for internship vs. full-time tone. Same click, slightly different voice.
  • Open-source once it’s not embarrassing. I’ll post the repo before fall recruiting hits.

Build With Me

If you’re a fellow builder looking for a teammate, I’d love to collaborate:

JavaScript tinkererswho know their way around Chrome Extensions
No-code automatorsready to stretch Make.com in new ways
Prompt-crafting nerds who can wring the perfect tone from ChatGPT

Ping me on LinkedIn (Parviz Sadikov) or email [email protected]


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