THE NEW PLAYBOOK

13 April 2026

By Michael Muir

5 min read

The Difference Between a CV Rewrite and a CV Assessment

A rewrite gives you a better document. An assessment gives you the understanding to write every CV you will ever need.

There are hundreds of CV writing services. Most of them do the same thing: you send your CV, someone rewrites it, and you get back a polished document. It looks better. It reads better. And six months later, when you need to tailor it for a different role, you are back to guessing.

The problem is not the quality of the rewrite. The problem is that you do not understand why anything changed.

Two Different Things, Sold as the Same Thing
CV Rewrite
A document
A polished CV. Tighter language, cleaner formatting, sharper positioning. But the document is a black box. You cannot reproduce the thinking for a different role next month.
CV Assessment
The reasoning
The rewrite, plus every decision annotated. How a recruiter reads your career, what was wrong, why the change works. The thinking is transferable. The document is not.

What a rewrite gives you

A CV rewrite gives you a better document. The language is tighter. The achievements are more prominent. The formatting is cleaner. If the writer is good, the positioning is sharper too.

But the document is a black box. You know it is better because a professional wrote it. You do not know what was wrong with the original, why specific changes were made, or how to apply the same thinking to a different version for a different role.

This matters because a CV is not a static document. You will need to tailor it for specific opportunities. You will need to update it as your career progresses. You will need to adjust the emphasis depending on what you are targeting.

If you do not understand the reasoning behind the rewrite, you cannot do any of that. You are dependent on the writer every time something changes.

What an assessment gives you

An assessment starts in a different place. Instead of rewriting the document, it starts by explaining how the document reads to the people who make hiring decisions.

What is landing on the first pass? What is your CV actually communicating about your career? Where is the positioning clear and where is it muddled? What would a recruiter change and, critically, why would they change it?

The rewrite follows from the assessment. Every change is explained. Every decision is annotated. You do not just get a better CV. You get the recruiter-grade thinking that produced it.

Why the reasoning matters more than the document

Understanding why a recruiter would restructure your professional summary is more valuable than the restructured summary itself. Because once you understand the principle, you can apply it to any version of your CV, for any role, at any point in your career.

The reasoning is transferable. The document is not.

Consider the difference:

A rewrite says: "Here is your new professional summary."

An assessment says: "Your current summary describes what you have done. A recruiter needs to know what you are for. Here is the rewrite, and here is why each sentence is structured the way it is. The first sentence positions you by specialism. The second establishes scale. The third signals direction. That order matters because of how the 7-second scan works."

The first gives you a fish. The second teaches you why the fish was caught that way, where to find more, and how to adjust your approach depending on what you are fishing for.

The annotation difference

The most valuable part of a proper CV assessment is the annotation: the explanation that sits alongside each change.

When your experience section gets rewritten, the annotation explains what was wrong with the original framing, why the new version leads with a different achievement, and how the restructuring affects how a recruiter reads your career progression.

When your value proposition gets rebuilt, the annotation explains the gap between what your CV was communicating and what you should be leading with.

These annotations are what make the assessment useful beyond the immediate document. They are the reasoning that lets you write your own CVs going forward.

What a Proper Annotation Explains
Summary
Why the first sentence leads
What the current summary was signalling and why that read flat. How the new first sentence positions you by specialism. Why the second establishes scale and the third signals direction.
Experience
Why this bullet, not that one
What was wrong with the original framing. Why the new version leads with a different achievement. How the restructure changes the way a recruiter reads your trajectory.
Value proposition
Where the gap was
The distance between what your CV was communicating and what you should actually be leading with. The reframe that closes it. The wording you can reuse in cover letters, LinkedIn, interviews.

How to tell the difference

If you are evaluating a CV service, ask one question: will I understand why every change was made?

If the answer is "you will receive a professionally rewritten CV," that is a rewrite. It will be better than what you have now. It will not make you better at writing your own CV.

If the answer is "you will see what a recruiter thinks about how you are currently positioned, what needs to change, and the reasoning behind every section of the rewrite," that is an assessment. It will give you both the document and the understanding to maintain it.

Both have value. But one lasts longer than the other.

A rewrite gives you a better document. An assessment gives you the understanding to write every CV you will ever need.

The CV Intelligence Report is an assessment. Every section of your CV rewritten with the reasoning annotated at each step. Two CVs ready to go. And the thinking that lets you tailor them for whatever comes next.

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Michael Muir

Founder · The Other Side

Twenty years placing candidates across high-calibre boutiques through to FTSE 100 companies. Thousands of CVs a year. Writes “Notes from the Desk” on how hiring decisions actually get made.

Read more about Michael

From the Other Side of the Desk

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