Small Tool, Clear Job

About LinkTextFix

LinkTextFix exists for one frustrating moment: when perfectly reasonable resume text turns messy after it is copied from a PDF and pasted into LinkedIn or another plain-text field. A polished document can suddenly show broken bullets, odd symbols, extra spaces, or invisible character problems that were not obvious in the original file.

This site was built to handle that cleanup step directly in the browser. Instead of acting like a full resume builder, LinkTextFix aims to remove common copy-and-paste artifacts so users can move faster and spend less time manually repairing text one line at a time.

The goal is not to rewrite your experience or make decisions for you. The goal is to give you a cleaner starting point before you paste text into a public profile, job application, or another system that strips formatting.

What LinkTextFix Is Designed To Do

  • Clean broken bullets and common list marker issues.
  • Repair some mojibake and copied encoding artifacts.
  • Remove zero-width and hidden junk characters when they appear.
  • Make pasted text easier to review before publishing it elsewhere.

What It Is Not

  • It is not a resume writer or career coach.
  • It is not a guarantee that every imported document will clean perfectly.
  • It is not a fact checker for job history, metrics, or dates.
  • It is not a replacement for a final human review.

How The Product Thinks About Trust

Professional profile text matters. If a cleanup tool changes the meaning of a line, that can create a real problem for the person using it. That is why LinkTextFix is positioned as a browser-based cleanup utility rather than a one-click resume optimizer. Users should review the cleaned output before they copy it into a public profile.

LinkTextFix is also designed around a simple privacy expectation: pasted text should stay in the browser unless a user intentionally shares feedback through email. If that behavior changes in the future, the site policy and interface should make that clear.

Advanced PDF workflows may be released later, but the public product remains focused on the basic cleanup problem first.