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    How To Write a Good Cover Letter for a Job

    Note from Neville:

    I wanted to show everyone how to write a kick ass cover letter....so I’m bringing in someone who’s read thousands of resumes, thousands of cover letters, and acts as the gatekeeper between thousands of people and the jobs they're hunting for.  Denise Renee.

    Denise Renee

    Denise Renee can tell you which cover letters suck, which are amazing, and which are a total waste of your time.  I added lots of poorly-drawn illustrations into this article so blame those on me, not Denise Renee!


     

    Denise Renee starts talking typing here:

    Thanks Neville!

    I have held several positions where I’ve performed HR functions throughout my career, such as on-boarding new employees, training, interviewing and hiring. A few years ago, I worked for an Executive Recruiting firm where I learned the industry inside and out. I also had an all-access backstage pass to the side of CareerBuilder.com job seekers don’t normally see.

    I have been a gatekeeper, guarding the door of employment for a few lucky souls. So I know from personal experience that gatekeepers don't have a lot of time. They are trying to wade through the deluge of resumes they receive daily and they want to get to the most relevant applicants as quickly as possible. A heavily reference study conducted by TheLadders.com back in 2012 revealed that recruiters spent an average of 6 seconds reading a resume before deciding if they were interested or not in reading more. If a hiring manager receives an email with a cover letter and resume attached to it, 9 times out of 10, they are going straight for the resume.

    In fact, I think that cover letters are a waste of time (with only 3 exceptions).

    No one likes you cover letter

    When was the last time you were verbally asked to hand in a cover letter?

    Back in the day when resumes were physically mailed (or faxed) to companies, a cover letter served a practical purpose. It was seen before the resume and was intended to entice the recipient to take a further look at what was enclosed:

    Old Faxed Documents

    Today, however, resumes are, more often than not, received electronically. Whether directly submitted via a company’s website, vetted by a recruiting firm, or sourced from an applicant pool such as Careerbuilder.com, resumes are digitally delivered without being married to a cover letter.

    You must understand.....

    If there is a digital database of resumes, there is an ATS (Applicant Tracking System) in place. When recruiting firms, individual companies and online applicant pools like CareerBuilder receive resumes, they are scanned and the relevant information is put into buckets like:

    • Name.
    • City/State.
    • Job Title.
    • Relevant keywords inside your resume (such as "Manager" or "Executive" or "Microsoft Excel" or "QuickBooks")

    So when a recruiter or a hiring manager has a position to fill and wants to search their internal database (or the database of a site like CareerBuilder), they can essentially do a “Google search” of the skill sets they are looking for, and the database shows them a list of resumes.

    In all my years in recruiting I've never seen a cover letter given much relevance by an ATS.

    It’s all about the resume baby.

    And today, your resume must be friendly to two things:

    1.) The ATS (Applicant Tracking System)...so when someone types in certain keywords your resume pops up.

    2.) The human who will skim through those resumes that decides who gets a pre-screening phone call. This person is The Gatekeeper and can make-or-break your chances of getting an interview.

    The human resources director gatekeeper of jobs

    For today’s job hunter, a cover letter is sometimes a deer-in-headlights afterthought.  They think after they’ve polished up their resume, “Maybe I should write a cover letter!”  Fresh out of ideas, what usually gets cranked out reads like recycled resume hash that goes something like this:

    Bad Cover Letter Example:

    Bad Cover Letter Emily Employee

    If this letter is supposed to entice the hiring manager to further examine the resume, it’s an epic fail.

    Why?

    Well, because:

    • It’s highly impersonal. ("Dear Hiring Manager." ...Seriously???)
    • It reads like a generic, plastic wrapped product that came off a cover letter assembly line when Reagan was President.
    • It only focuses on the job seeker and their desire for an interview, not what the employers wants or needs.
    • It’s a snooze fest. (That should probably be listed as #1)!
    • It just summarizes what’s in the resume, so there's no compelling reason to look at the resume...which is supposed to be the point of a cover letter, right?

    So in the digital age, there's not much point to writing a cover letter......well, except in these three cases:

     

    The Only 3 Times You Must Write A Cover Letter:

    I actually think there are three situations where cover letters are important, if not mandatory:

    Situation #1.) When you are specifically asked for one by an individual company’s website.

    Some companies have their own in-depth online application process via their website. You may have discovered this by being redirected when using a site like Indeed.com or CareerBuilder.com or if you are conducting a proactive job search. If their process requests that you submit a cover letter, then submit a cover letter! You never want to leave out a step in a hiring process because I can promise you, the person on the other end sorting through those applications is just PRAYING you give them a reason to disqualify you; you’ll be one less application to read. Not paying attention to instructions during the application or interview process with any company is a red flag to them; you may not follow instructions if hired. So I wouldn’t play with that if I were you.

    General template:

     

    Example: when the company asks for specific suggestions

    Example: when the company asks for a specific word to be mentioned

    Example: when a content manager asks for article ideas in the cover letter

    Situation #2.) when a connection has been made for you.

    If you are serious about landing your next position, you wouldn’t rely on a passive method such as submitting your resume to CareerBuilder.com and to company websites as your sole strategy. Tapping into your network is an excellent way to be proactive about your job search. According to the US Bureau of Labor Statistics, about 70% of jobs are found through networking or are unadvertised positions. So when one of your friends, colleague or mentors say, “I have someone you should send your resume too,” follow through on that lead! You now now have a golden opportunity to bypass the recruiting “black hole” of online applications and HR blockades to put your resume in the hands of a warm-blooded influencer at the company. It most definitely should be accompanied by a well crafted cover letter.

    General template:

    Example: CMO reaching out to a startup founder via mutual friend

    Example: PPC specialist reaching out to a big brand leader via a mutual connection

    Example: reaching out to development agency officers before moving to a new country

    Situation #3.) When you are conducting a proactive job search. 

    Where a cover letter is relevant, if not mandatory is when you are conducting a proactive job search. It’s when you’ve identified specific companies you’d like to work with (regardless if they are currently hiring in your field or not), you’ve thoroughly researched their history and growth plans and you’ve crafted a strategy to find your way in. Once you’ve identified the best individual to make your introduction, you’ll most certainly want to whip up a customized cover letter and send it off via snail mail with your resume; both should be on that fancy paper you can get at Office Depot or Staples.

    General template:

    Example: copywriter reaching out to a marketing agency

    Example: Lawyer reaching out to a clean tech consulting firm

    Example: Web developer reaching out to a local sports team

    Example: reaching out to a founder after listening to their podcast interview

    How To Write An Attention Grabbing Cover Letter That Gets You Phone Calls:

    This next part is only for those of you who don’t see yourself as the average “Jo/anna Shmoe” employee. If you put a high value on your skillset and you understand that you are both the CEO and CMO of “You Inc.” you are probably a proactive type of job seeker and you’ll immediately get what I’m about to say next.

    In order to write an effective cover letter, you have to write it like a sales letter:

    Cover letter vs resume

    Yes, the same kind of sales letter that Neville teaches the people in his copywriting course to write. Remember Bobby and the boring emails he used to write to influential client prospects? That’s exactly how most people churn out cover letters. Boring, stale, snooze material.

    Remember, you are the CMO (Chief Marketing Officer) of “You Inc.” It’s your job to show your potential customers (recruiters and hiring managers) that you have the best solution or product (your superior skill set) that will solve their business problems.

    This will require that you understand that company’s vision, goals and pain points. You’re not going to get that simply from a job posting on Indeed.com. You’ll actually need to engage in the “hunting” part of “job hunting.” You can gain a 360 degree perspective of your target companies by doing things like studying their website, searching for press clippings, stalking their employees on Linkedin (in a professional way, of course), going to association meetings that some of their employees are a part of or by attending industry events the company will have a presence, just to name a few tactics.

    When you are adequately armed with both the knowledge of what the company’s current trajectory is, along with an appropriate influencer within the company to direct your resume to, you can now write your cover letter.

    The Cover Letter Checklist:

    Your cover letter must take everything that is wrong in my bad cover letter example above and do the exact opposite. A cover letter that will have a hiring manager or recruiter calling you before they’ve finished reading will:

    cover letter checklist

    So to craft this masterpiece, you simply follow a tried and true copywriting formula: AIDA.

    A – Grab their Attention

    I – Spark their Interest

    D – Create Desire

    A – Invite them to take Action

    So let’s say Emily Employee has decided she wants to work at Global Technical Services. She’s done her research and learned that their Atlanta area expansion has not been going very well. Local news reports revealed that their contractor relationships have been failing and they’ve been refunding their end-user clients to make up for lack of poor service. Emily has the Regional Manager, Richard Robinson’s contact info. So now instead of the snooze fest letter she sent above, she’ll send one that sounds more like this:

    Good Cover Letter Example:

    Good cover letter example emily

    Here’s why this cover letter will perform better for Emily:

    • She immediately grabs Richard’s attention by addressing him by name.

    • She addresses the company’s biggest pain points: their current PR problem and their profit problem.
    • She stirs up interest by showing how her existing relationships in the field can contribute to a potential solution.
    • She is showing how she’ll be a benefit to the organization.

    Richard is probably salivating with desire to get his hands on Emily’s connections and she gives him an action to take....review her resume and call her. If you were Richard, wouldn't you call Emily?

    ::::Denise Renee drops the mic and sashays off stage!::::

    Ok, I’m back!

    But there you have it: when and how to write a relevant cover letter. When job seekers start thinking more like marketers and sales professionals, I have the pleasure of seeing them become better resume and cover letter writers. I hope this nudges you one step closer to landing your dream job!

    Sincerely,

    Denise Renee

    Download this entire Cover Letter Post for your own files or sharing with colleagues:

    Click here to subscribe

     

    P.S. Neville back with you. Whenever people ask “where can I find a copywriter” for the HR industry, I always refer them to Denise Renee. Years ago she took one of my classes and I was blown away by the content she wrote about how to cleverly stuff a resume with keywords so it shows up in a recruiters list.  You can grab her free ebook 5 Essential Resume Hacks or stalk her for cool personal branding and career tips on Facebook or Periscope.

    If you ever have job-related or professional space copy to be written, keep Denise Renee in your Copywriting Rolodex.

     

    P.P.S.  If you would like to ask Denise Renee any questions about your own cover letter or resume, ask below! She kindly said she'd answer them all. She was the gatekeeper for thousands of job seekers, so she knows a lot of the tricks of the trade.

    Other articles to help you at work:

    How to write a good memo.

    Effective workplace communications skills.


    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments



    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Elijah J, thanks for reading and thanks for your positive feedback!!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Steve, thanks for reading and for your great question. As a rule of thumb during a job hunt and interviewing process, don't create an issue where there isn't one. And don't highlight them either. Remember your cover letter is to entice the reader to view your resume and qualifications. Relocation is only an issue once you've been offered and have accepted a job. Try your best not to make in an issue or big deal during the interview process either. Depending on what country you're in, you're very likely around 10 -14 hours ahead of East Coast time. Just be sure to avail yourself for phone calls or Skype sessions during the employer's local business times. If you don't frame it as a big deal, they won't see it as a big deal either. Only mention your location if you absolutely have to and just verbally say you are planning on moving back to the States soon at your own expense and move on to the next topic. I hope that helps!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Daniel, thanks for reading and for your question. You should always follow up. You don't want to be like a stalker and call every day but one week is appropriate, especially if they said they would get back to you. I would say follow up twice by phone and at least once by email. If after three touches you still don't hear back, move on.
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Scharlette, thanks for reading and I'm so glad you enjoyed the article and got something out of it!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Jasper, thanks for reading and your comments. I would keep this advice in your arsenal because even as a business owner, you will probably need to write proposals or other persuasive pieces to a decision maker. The principles and power of copywrting remain the same. You still have to capture their attention and show them how you are the best option for a service provider. Make sense?
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Dave, thanks for reading and for your positive comments. You are so right... looking for a job IS a full-time job!!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Sheiler, thanks for reading and thanks for your comments. I'm glad to be helpful in any way I can :)!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Ugo, thanks so much for reading and for your comments. Your experiences back up the reality that many jobs are filled via networking/personal referrals. Thanks so much for sharing!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Katherine, thanks so much for reading and for your insightful comments. You actually are backing up my secondary point and that is people should be conducting a proactive job search, one in which they find out who the actual hiring manager or person they'll be reporting to is and connecting directly with them. Thanks also for the tip on not using both the first and last name :).
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Jayne, thanks for reading and thanks for your question. If you are conducting a proactive job search, it is imperative that you exhaust all your resources to find the appropriate person and their name. If not, find out someone who might be in that department and direct it to them. They can pass it upstream appropriately. But if you're just submitting something through the usual online channels like CareerBuilder, I wouldn't stress about it and use a generic "Dear Hiring Manager."
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Mike, thanks for reading and for your comments! Continued luck to you on Upwork!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Ben, thanks for reading and for your question. I know I didn't spend a lot of time talking about this but let me highlight what I did share:

    "This will require that you understand that company’s vision, goals and pain points. You’re not going to get that simply from a job posting on Indeed.com. You’ll actually need to engage in the “hunting” part of “job hunting.” You can gain a 360 degree perspective of your target companies by doing things like studying their website, searching for press clippings, stalking their employees on Linkedin (in a professional way, of course), going to association meetings that some of their employees are a part of or by attending industry events the company will have a presence, just to name a few tactics."

    Does that help?

    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Kimberly, thanks for reading and for your questions. #1 - that is just an example of a tangible result. Whatever you promise, it should be based on what you know you can deliver and that should be "provable" by your prior performance. #2 - remember that the goal of your cover letter is to get them to read your resume and qualifications listed therein. If you want to include additional profiles, websites and portfolios, include that on your resume. Don't distract the reader from opening / reading your resume first. If they want to go get more info after reading your resume, they will.
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Vesc, thanks for reading and for sharing your experience. If you notice, the cover letter sample is very much a pattern-interrupt! It is all about grabbing attention in a short amount of time. Stories work wonderfully too, but not everyone is a skilled enough writer to pull it off. You keep doing what works for you!
    Link to comment
    Guest Denise Renee

    Posted

    Hi Ansis, thanks for reading and for sharing! Sometimes when people overuse common buzzwords (like "team player, go-getter, etc.) without showing any proof, that's usually a red flag for me. Or if things sound so good to be true and then you speak with them on the phone, it becomes apparent that either they hired a professional to write their resume or they simply "over-embellish." My #1 tip to job seekers is to never lie or embellish on a resume because it only hurts the job seeker in the end. The truth is always revealed!
    Link to comment
    Guest Roberto

    Posted

    Great post Denise. Thanks for sharing. Very timely too. Just had an intro phone interview for a potential job. I was not looking for a job but the recruiter reached out to me.

    With the help of my wife (the writer in our household) we stayed up late last night updating my resume. At the end of it all I knew that I need to spend time to give my resume a complete overhaul. I was not happy with the results but it was good enough. So I need to make some serious changes soon. Because of this I have a ton of questions...

    1) My resume is 2 pages long, by adding my most current job it takes it to 3 pages. What are your thoughts on having a resume with pages. Is resume page length an important factor? Do recruiters get turned off by more than 2 pages?

    2) If I have to trim some information... How do you (recruiters in general) feel about putting a one liner for positions early on in my career. Or what do you recommend with experiences that are 15 years or older. What is the best way to include them in a resume without taking on too much real estate.

    3) What is the most important message to convey on a resume? The things that I have been responsible for or examples of accomplishment and results?

    4) If I worked for one company for over 10 years and have had over 7 positions as I moved up the ladder. Do you feel necessary that I must list every single one of them? How could I streamline that so that my resume is not too long.

    5) What are things that are less important in a resume as you become more seasoned with over 25 years of work experience?

    Thanks in advance for your advice with this.

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Hey Jayne, you should try going through LinkedIN and Facebook to see if you know ANYONE AT ALL at the company you're trying to apply to.

    Chances are you'll have a friend or at least a friend-of-a-friend that will.

    If that doesn't work, try asking friends in the same industry if they know any contacts at that company. Good luck!

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Hey Mikestar. I would suggest also taking some small copywriting gigs on Fiverr just to build up your repetoire and get more exposure (low money, high volume of jobs at first).

    I am actually doing a full post about this next Monday!

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Hey Ben, try these (and be proactive about this)!

    --Go to company website, find their events.

    --Go to company website, find their fundraiser or charity events. Find employees from there at the booths and chat them up.

    --Figure out who in your network knows anything about the company.

    --Google the hell out of them.

    --Setup a Google Alert so a notification pops up with any news.

    --Read their quarterly investor updates (if they are public).

    --Listen to their quarterly investor calls (if they are public).

    --Subscribe to their Facebook/Twitter/LinkedIN

    Hope this helps!

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Some great tips here Katherine! Definitely NevBox-worthy for the effort :)
    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    You know what's funny Daniel?

    A lot of times when hiring, it sometimes just comes down to WHO CALLED ME AT THE RIGHT MOMENT.

    If you are really nice and respectful on the phone, a lot of people won't get annoyed if you called twice a week.

    Twice a day? That's pushing it.

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Thanks so much Ansis.....Denise got most of the content here done (I just drew dumb images) :-P

    You know I'm a HUGE HATER of buzzwords. I completely agree with Denise that words like "Team Player" mean absolutely nothing without context.

    Here's how I would do it.

    BAD WAY:

    I'm a team leader.

     

    GOOD WAY:

    I'm a team player. For example, there was a huge crisis in the accounting department when a bunch of people suddenly left the company and no one knew what to do. I immediately took charge, handled the crisis, and even got an award for "Incredible Leadership Shown" from the CEO.

     

    Just giving a quick example (few sentence, no need to re-hash the whole incident) can solidify you as a "leader" rather than just SAYING you're a leader.

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Ohh....some great questions....I'm curious to see Denise Renee's responses also!!
    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Thanks for sharing Vesc!

    Definitely keep doing what works for you.

    If you're a great writer, then giving a story works. However if you're read OTHER PEOPLE'S stories sometimes they're just terrible and badly written. For those folks, maybe just sticking to listing facts is best :)

    Link to comment
    Guest Neville

    Posted

    Great questions Kimberly.

    I would definitely start keeping a list of accomplishments from your work life on file (maybe just create a Google Doc so you can update it from anywhere, even a phone). Then when it comes time to update your resume, you'll have SO many examples you'll have the problem of select what NOT to put in!

    I certainly benefit from writing things down immediately so I don't forget them later in the future.

    Link to comment



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