Expert tips to maximize your chances of getting noticed by hiring managers.

The Purpose of a Cover Letter

Your cover letter is your chance to show personality and passion that a resume can’t convey. It’s where you explain why you’re interested in this specific role at this specific company.

The Winning Formula

1. Strong Opening (First Paragraph)

Hook the reader immediately:

  • Show genuine enthusiasm for the company
  • Mention the specific role
  • Include a relevant credential or achievement
  • Ask a question that demonstrates research

2. Connection Building (Middle Paragraphs)

  • Match your skills to their needs
  • Use specific examples from your experience
  • Show how you’ve solved similar problems
  • Demonstrate industry knowledge

3. Strong Close (Final Paragraph)

  • Reiterate your genuine interest
  • Provide clear next steps
  • Include your contact information
  • Express gratitude for their consideration

Do’s and Don’ts

Do’s:

  • ✓ Address the hiring manager by name
  • ✓ Keep it to one page
  • ✓ Use the company’s language and values
  • ✓ Show you’ve researched the company
  • ✓ Quantify your achievements
  • ✓ Maintain consistent formatting
  • ✓ Proofread multiple times

Don’ts:

  • ✗ Use generic openings (“I am writing to apply…”)
  • ✗ Repeat your resume verbatim
  • ✗ Use an unprofessional email address
  • ✗ Make excuses for lacking experience
  • ✗ Use overly casual language
  • ✗ Include irrelevant personal information
  • ✗ Use odd fonts or formatting

Industry-Specific Tips

Tech & Software:

Emphasize specific technologies, problem-solving approach, and contributions to real projects. Show enthusiasm for continuous learning.

Finance & Accounting:

Focus on accuracy, regulatory knowledge, and specific financial achievements with metrics. Professional tone is essential.

Marketing & Creative:

Tell a compelling story, show creativity within professionalism, and provide metrics of past campaigns’ success.

Healthcare & Education:

Emphasize compassion, commitment to the mission, and patient/student success stories. Show understanding of their values.

The 80/20 Rule

80% of your cover letter should be about THEM (the company, role, their needs). Only 20% should be about YOU (your skills, achievements). Remember: companies care about what you can do for them, not just your qualifications.

Quality Over Quantity

It’s better to send 5 personalized, perfectly tailored cover letters than 20 generic ones. Take time with each application and quality will shine through.

Tracking What Works

Keep records of:

  • Which writing styles get responses
  • What openings work best
  • Companies that request interviews
  • Your conversion rate for different approaches

Use this data to refine your approach and increase your success rate over time.