Onboarding proof

Turn your CV into an interactive profile

Do not start from scratch. Bring a CV, PDF, doc, blog, profile, or URL. Explore can analyze existing material and map it into your Explore account.

That makes onboarding feel much more practical: start with what already exists, then turn it into a profile that is readable by humans and usable by agents.

The a-ha moment

You already have material worth starting from.

A static CV, profile, or doc is not the finished product, but it is a strong starting point. Explore helps map that source into something richer and easier to explore.

CV PDF Doc Blog URL

What changed

  • No blank-page onboarding.
  • CLI + Codex makes the import flow natural.
  • Explore turns static source material into structured profile data.

Why this matters

Most engineers already have useful profile material. It is just stuck in static places.

Most profile tools still begin with forms and blank fields. That means retyping work you already wrote once.

Explore can start from existing material instead. That reduces blank-page friction, gives onboarding a much better starting point, and gets you to a usable profile faster.

The a-ha workflow

A simple flow, not a complicated migration project.

This is the onboarding moment the page is proving: start an account, connect through the CLI in Codex, point Explore at a source you already have, and review the mapped result before it becomes a live profile.

1

Create an Explore account

Start with the normal account setup so the imported material has a real home inside Explore.

2

Log in via the CLI from Codex

Use the Explore CLI in the flow you already use for agent-assisted work, then authenticate owner actions in the browser when needed.

3

Point Explore at an existing source

Bring a CV, PDF, doc, public profile, blog post, or URL instead of rebuilding the first version manually.

4

Ask Explore to analyze and import it

Explore maps the source into the Explore model, turning static material into profile-ready structure.

5

Review the mapped result inside Explore

The result is a richer starting point you can refine, publish, and keep updating on the web or via the CLI.

Real import example

A real import flow, not a theoretical one

Sign up, authenticate through the Explore CLI flow, point Explore at an existing CV or source file, and let the mapped profile result get applied to the account. The value is not the upload itself. The value is turning existing material into a stronger profile starting point.

Codex importing an attached CV into an Explore account and applying the mapped profile result
A real import run: existing CV attached, mapped into an Explore profile, and applied to the account.

What got imported

The source is static. The result is more usable.

Depending on the material you bring, Explore can map profile details into a more structured starting point for a richer public profile.

Role history

Experience and timeline details can move out of a flat document into a clearer profile structure.

Projects

Important work can become easier to scan and later expand with more context.

Writing and links

Published writing, public links, and supporting references can be pulled closer to the profile itself.

Summary and experience details

A short bio or CV summary can become a profile foundation that is easier to refine than a blank editor.

What the result becomes

What starts as a CV becomes a richer public profile.

The imported material does not stay trapped as a file. It becomes a live Explore profile with clearer structure, better scanability, and grounded follow-up that can go further than a static document.

Live Explore profile created from imported CV content with structured sections and grounded follow-up chat
The imported result becomes a live Explore profile with structured content and grounded follow-up.

Supported source types

This is bigger than one PDF upload.

The proof point starts with a CV, but the idea is broader: Explore can work from existing source material when that material is available in a form the workflow can analyze and map responsibly.

Current workflow examples

  • CV or resume documents
  • PDFs and docs
  • Public profiles and URLs
  • Blogs or other published writing

Why agent accessibility matters

  • The source does not need to be manually re-entered field by field.
  • CLI and agent workflows make analysis and mapping feel more natural.
  • The result is a richer Explore profile, not just stored raw input.

The exact mapped result depends on the source quality and structure, so this page is showing a practical workflow direction rather than making rigid promises about every possible format.

Walkthrough

Walkthrough video coming soon

The screenshots above already show the proof. A short video showing the full flow, from signup to CLI login to source import, will make it easier to watch end-to-end. If you want to see it early or try the workflow yourself, create a profile or reach out.

Why this is different

Most profile builders start with forms. Explore can start with what you already have.

Normal flow

Retype the basics

Many products begin by asking you to rebuild your profile manually, one field at a time.

Explore flow

Start from existing material

Explore can absorb useful source material first, then help turn it into a stronger interactive profile.

What that enables

Practical agent-assisted onboarding

Agent accessibility is not decorative here. It makes import, analysis, and transformation workflows much more natural for technical users.

Start here

Bring what you already have

Start with a CV, PDF, doc, blog, or URL and turn it into a richer Explore profile.