News
ProductJune 2, 2026

CV Maker now imports from CVs, LinkedIn, and GitHub

Start with what you already have. Import an old CV, add LinkedIn details, and select GitHub projects for one editable draft.

Import an old CV

Upload an existing CV and CVoria turns it into editable sections instead of making you copy everything by hand.

Add LinkedIn

Bring in LinkedIn profile details when your CV is missing context, recent roles, or stronger profile wording.

Select GitHub projects

Preview repositories, choose the projects that matter, and add them to your CV as portfolio-ready project entries.

Combine sources

Use one source or several. CVoria keeps the result as a normal editable draft, so you stay in control.

Start with what already exists

CV Maker now supports imports from old CV files, LinkedIn, and GitHub. Instead of starting from a blank form, users can bring in the material they already have and turn it into one editable CV draft.

This is especially useful when someone has an outdated CV, a stronger LinkedIn profile than their document, or technical projects that are easier to find on GitHub than describe from memory.

The goal is not to lock users into imported text. The goal is to give them a better first draft faster, then let them edit the result like any other CV in CVoria.

CV, LinkedIn, and GitHub can work together

The import flow is built around combining sources. A user can import an old CV first, then add LinkedIn details, then select GitHub repositories to add as projects.

Each source adds context to the current draft. That means users do not need to choose one “correct” starting point if their experience is spread across different places.

Imported sources are shown in the builder so users can see what the draft is based on, and they can remove a source from future imports without deleting the content they have already added.

GitHub import is project-first

GitHub import focuses on projects, not dumping an entire profile into the CV. CVoria loads a project preview, helps identify strong repositories, and lets the user select which projects to include.

Project entries can include repository links and README media when available, but the user still decides what belongs in the final CV.

That keeps GitHub useful for portfolios without turning the CV into a list of every repository a person has ever created.

The draft stays editable

After importing, the CV is still a normal CV Maker draft. Users can change wording, reorder sections, adjust templates, edit projects, add photos where templates support them, and export the final PDF.

This matters because imports are only a starting point. A good CV still needs judgment: what to keep, what to shorten, what to emphasize, and how to make the document fit the role.

CVoria handles the busy work of getting information into the builder, while the user keeps control over the final story.