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Link hubJune 20, 20264 min read

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.

Build one that parses.

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