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CloudHire Profile Dashboard: Complete Your Profile to Get Better Job Matches

Once you’ve completed onboarding, the Profile Dashboard becomes the place where you’ll spend most of your time managing your CloudHire account. It stores your professional information, powers your public profile, and supports several other features across the platform.

Here’s what you’ll find inside and how each section works:

What Cloudhire Dashboard Is Actually Building Toward

At a high level, this is the page where you manage everything that eventually becomes visible to recruiters, whether that is through your public profile link, an auto-generated resume, or your CloudID page. From the top, you can generate a resume and grab a shareable public profile link to send directly to potential employers, which is useful outside of CloudHire’s own job board too, say in a cold email to a hiring manager.

Profile Strength, and Why It Is Not Just a Vanity Number

On the side panel sits a profile strength indicator, and it climbs as you complete each section: basic details, certifications, projects, education, work experience, and identity verification. It is tempting to treat this as a gamified progress bar and ignore it, but it maps directly to what shows up as verified on your CloudID. Identity verification specifically runs through Aadhaar or PAN, and completing it is what unlocks that verified badge recruiters see on your public profile.

The Sections That Actually Do the Work

The about section is your professional summary, a short pitch in your own words about who you are and what you do. Below that sit the details recruiters scan first: your name, designation, years of experience, notice period, availability, work type, and location. None of this is buried, it sits near the top because it answers the questions a recruiter asks within the first ten seconds of opening a profile.

Preferred skills is where you can highlight and rate the skills you consider your strongest, adding new ones through a simple plus option as your experience grows. Your experience section works the same way, letting you add a role with location, dates, a description, and even a company website link, along with supporting documents like a relieving letter or a salary slip if you have one ready to attach. These documents matter more than they might seem, since they are exactly what gets checked when CloudHire verifies your employment history for CloudID.

Education follows a similar structure, letting you attach a degree certificate alongside any achievement you want to describe. Certifications get their own section entirely, and projects round things out, letting you list what you built, when you worked on it, and a description of what it involved. Everything here can be edited or removed later, so there is no pressure to get it perfect on the first pass.

Resume Generation, and What to Do if It Stalls

From the dashboard, you can also regenerate your resume at any point, which is worth knowing since occasionally, during high traffic periods, the generation can take a little longer than usual. If that happens, requesting a regeneration and checking your email shortly after usually resolves it. For a deeper look at customizing the resume itself, including templates and formatting, the resume generator walkthrough covers that separately.

Deactivating Your Account

At the bottom of the dashboard sits an account deactivation option for anyone who decides CloudHire is no longer the right fit for their job search. It is a straightforward toggle, not a support ticket you need to file.

Once your dashboard is reasonably complete, it is worth checking how it translates into your public-facing CloudID profile, since that is the version recruiters actually see when CloudHire applies on your behalf.

Create your CloudHire profile and get found by recruiters →

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