Sparkify Career reads them, scores each one against your actual resume, and emails an application — from your own mailbox, in your own name — to the ones that genuinely fit. The rest it leaves alone.
Starts in dry run: it writes the emails and sends none until you say so.
Most of your feed is not a job post. The whole design is about throwing things away cheaply, so that what survives is worth an email.
No email in the post, no application. We read the obfuscated ones too
— hr (at) acme (dot) io is still an address.
One application per employer address, ever. Scrolling past the same post twice costs nothing and sends nothing.
Not keyword matching — a judgement on whether you'd be a credible applicant for this specific role. Hiring announcements and “my DMs are open” posts score zero. Below your threshold, nothing is sent.
A short email citing real evidence from your resume against what the post asked for. Sent over your own SMTP, so replies land in your inbox and it reads like you wrote it.
Automation that emails strangers under your name is only reasonable if you can bound what it does. These aren't settings buried in a menu — they're the shape of the thing.
It does the real scoring and writes the real emails, then sends nothing. Read what it would have sent until the scores stop surprising you.
Enforced by a database constraint, not a code path that could be bypassed by a retry or a race.
A few per hour, a couple of dozen per day, both yours to set. A scoring bug can't turn into three hundred emails.
Auto mode off and the server refuses the extension outright — regardless of what the browser thinks it's doing.
Your API key and mail password are encrypted before they touch the database. The extension never receives them, and neither does any page.
It scrolls your feed for you, and stops the moment you touch the page. It won't fight you for the scrollbar.
You're rarely looking for one thing. Every post is scored against all of your active profiles and the best fit wins — each with its own titles, locations, deal breakers, and its own threshold for what's worth an email.
Worth knowing before you sign up rather than after.