Too often job seekers overlook the importance of a cover letter. The cover letter is your one chance to speak directly to the hiring manager or HR gatekeeper. It’s literally like you’ve gotten 60 seconds of their time for your elevator pitch- your quick spiel about why are so great. Yes, your resume is very important, but in a cover letter you get the opportunity to tell an employer something about who you are, how well you write, and how much you are interested in this specific job and why. You don’t get to do that with a resume. So the rule to follow is: if you are submitting a resume, you should be submitting a cover letter. Always.
So now we know that the cover letter is of supreme importance. Great. So the question remains (as per the title of this blog) “How do I write a killer cover letter?”. The reality is that you are probably applying for tens of jobs (hundreds these days?) so you realistically do not have time to write all of these cover letters from scratch start to finish. That’s OK though- as long as you have a strategy, you can make the cover letter look like it’s written from scratch just for this employer for this particular job. So your strategy will be that there will be sections of the cover letter that are standardized and sections that are custom tailored for each job and each employer. You may even want to have a few versions of the standardized part in the same way that you probably have a few different versions of your resume depending on the job you are applying for. For example if you are applying to both Marketing Coordinator jobs and PR Assistant jobs, you will need to talk about different things in your cover letter depending on if it’s a marketing job or a PR job. At the end of the day, your number one goal is to make the employer feel like you are writing to them specifically about this specific job.
The standardized section of a cover letter: in this section you will write about your past relevant experience why you are interested in this field/area/sector. It definitely helps when an employer feels like you are genuinely interested in and enthusiastic about the work. You can also address any weaknesses or gaps in your resume. If you have been unemployed for a long period of time or are just getting back into the workforce, you might want to address that here. Perhaps your GPA wasn’t strong, but you took all honors courses or worked a full time job to put yourself through school. This isn’t a place for making excuses, but it a place to provide explanations.
The custom tailored section of a cover letter: This is where you want to make sure to do a little due diligence on the company and on the position. Make the employer feel like this is the exact job you want, and tell them why. If an employer feels like you don’t know anything about the company or the role and that you are just mass submitting resumes to hundreds of jobs, that’s a big turn off. Speak intelligently about why Oracle is a good fit or interesting for you and why this specific role is particularly well-suited to your skills and past experience. At a most basic level, make sure that you have the person’s name right at the top of the cover letter and that you have the right company and position title in the letter that you are applying for. You might be surprised how many employers get cover letters addressed to other people at different companies for another just because the candidate wasn’t astute enough to double check the letter before sending!
So follow these steps, invest in your cover letter, and set yourself a cut above the crowd!









