Wednesday, April 15, 2020
The Best Cover Letter Writing Tips, Plus a Free Template
The Best Cover Letter Writing Tips, Plus a Free Template Itâs a good time to be a job seeker: U.S. job growth is strong, unemployment is on a steady decline, and openings are at an all-time high. That doesnât make the search any less daunting. Differentiating yourself from every other job seeker on the market is no small feat, and the monotony of filling out online applications can make the task downright exhausting. Thatâs where a killer cover letter comes in. Done right, a great cover letter is like a secret weapon for catching a hiring managerâs attention. Next to your resume, itâs one of the most important, underutilized tools at your disposal. Here are some cover letter writing tips, and a free, downloadable template, to make yours stand out. 1. Personalize Every cover letter you write should be tailored to the job youâre applying for â" just like your resume. Study the job posting carefully, and make a quick list of any essential qualifications. âJob seekers really struggle with what to say on a cover letter,â says Jessica Holbrook Hernandez, President and CEO of Great Resumes Fast. âTaking a second to think about why youâre applying, and why youâre a good fit for the company, makes the process a lot easier.â If youâre adding a cover letter to an online application, use a business letter format with a header and contact information. If youâre sending an email, itâs OK to leave out the header, but be sure to provide a phone number (and an attached resume, of course). Make sure youâre clear about the position youâre applying for. Avoid nameless salutations â" it might take a little Google research, and some LinkedIn outreach, but finding the actual name of the positionâs hiring manager will score you major brownie points. âDo not start a cover letter with, âto whom it may concern,ââ Holbrook Hernandez says. âIt concerns no one.â 2. Tell a Story To grab a recruiterâs attention, a good narrativeâ"with a killer opening lineâ"is everything. âThe cover letter is a story,â says Satjot Sawhney, a resume and career strategist with Loft Resumes. âWhat is the most interesting thing youâre doing thatâs relevant to this job?â Use that to guide your letter. Ideally, the story that drives your resume will focus on a need at the company youâre applying for. If youâre a PR professional, maybe you have a list of clients in an industry the team wants to break into. If youâre in marketing, a successful promotional campaign might be the ticket in. âA hiring manager wants to see results-driven accomplishments with a past employer,â says Holbrook Hernandez. âIf youâve done it before, you can deliver it again.â If you have a career gap or are switching industries, address it upfront. âIf thereâs anything unique in your career history, call that out in the beginning,â says professional resume writer Brooke Shipbaugh. (Hereâs a downloadable sample.) 3. Use Bullet Points to Show Impact Hiring managers are usually slammed with applications, so short, quick cover letters are preferable to bloated ones, says Paul Wolfe, Senior Vice President of human resources at job site Indeed. âMake your cover letter a brief, bright reference tool,â he says. âThe easier you can make it on the recruiter the better.â Bullet points are a good tool for pulling out numbers-driven results. Job seekers in creative fields like art and design can use bullets to break down their most successful project. Those in more traditional roles (like the one in the template), can hammer off two or three of their most impressive accomplishments. 4. Highlight Culture Fit Itâs often overlooked, but a major function of the cover letter is to show a company how well youâd mesh with the culture. As you research a potential employer, look for culture cues on the company website, social media, and review sites like Glassdoor. Oftentimes, employers will nod to culture in a job posting. If the ad mentions a âteam environment,â it might be good to play up a recent, successful collaboration. If the company wants a âself-starter,â consider including an achievement that proves you donât need to be micromanaged. The tone of your letter can also play to culture. âThe cover letter is a great place to show [an employer] how you fit into their world,â Shipbaugh says. âShow some personality.â 5. End with an Ask The goal of a cover letter is to convince the person reading it to make the next move in the hiring process â" with a phone call, interview, or otherwise. Ending on a question opens that door without groveling for it. âYou have to approach this with a non-beggar mentality,â Sawhney says. âHaving an âaskâ levels the playing field.â Related: What Your Resume Should Look Like in 2018
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