The link hub: one URL for your whole application
A résumé is a document. Your work is a web of links. A link hub is the small page that joins them, with a QR code that turns a printed résumé into a tap.
Your résumé lists a GitHub, a portfolio, maybe a LinkedIn. On paper, none of them are clickable. In a PDF, they are a row of long URLs nobody types. The link hub fixes the gap between a static document and the live work it points to.
What a link hub is
It is a single, clean page at your own short URL that holds the things you want a recruiter to open: your résumé, your best projects, your profiles, and a line about what you are looking for. One link to send, one link to remember.
The QR code is the point
Printed résumés still exist: career fairs, interviews, a copy left on a desk. A QR code in the corner of the document turns that paper into a tap. Someone scans it and lands on your hub, where every link is live. The most analog version of you suddenly connects to the most current one.
- One URL instead of five scattered across the page.
- A scannable code that bridges print and web.
- Live view counts, so you know a link was actually opened.
- A consistent front door you can put in an email signature or a bio.
Keep it honest and current
A link hub is only useful if it points at real, current work. Prune dead links. Lead with the project you would actually talk about. Treat it like the résumé itself: small, true, and easy to read. In lapel the hub is generated from your résumé and customisable in its own editor, and the moment you turn it on, the URL is live.