Say Cheese! Cover Letters Present a
Candid Snapshot of You to Potential Employers
Written by Teena
Rose, ResumeToReferral.com; The following was
excerpted from “Designing a Cover Letter to ‘Wow’ Hiring Personnel” … book
includes 100+ cover letter examples. CLICK HERE NOW to get a free 19-page book preview with 5 cover letter
examples.
Whether
in your personal life or in business, you only get one chance to make a first
impression … we’ve all heard that before, right? So, why do so many jobseekers
screw up something so important?
The
cover letter is a chance to make a positive impression on a potential employer.
Unlike a face-to-face meeting, where your nervousness or bad luck can turn a
first impression into a disaster, a cover letter is a first impression that you
get to have complete control over. You decide exactly what you will say,
without any time pressure or having to come up with something spontaneously,
and you also get to “stage” your letter.
You
control what it looks like, what it sounds like, and how you come across.
The
key element to remember is that while you might easily spend two hours
agonizing over every detail of your cover letter, the
first person reading it is not going to invest even a small fraction of that
time. Your letter will be scanned quickly the first time, and only if your
resume or application jumps to the “short list” is it likely that anyone will
really take the time to read your letter word-for-word. So you have a two-fold
challenge: you must write a well-crafted letter that comes across well on a
deep reading, and you must write a
letter that favorably grabs the attention of the casual reader who is simply
scanning.
Your
first impression makes a first impression itself – the envelope and paper you use for your cover letter will send an
unmistakable signal to the person who receives it. What? You thought
printed resumes and cover letters were dead? Not exactly.
There are plenty of smaller companies that still welcome (some preferring)
printed materials. In fact, go to a job fair and you’ll find paper resumes
nervously gripped by anxious jobseekers.
When
printing, does your cover letter arrive in a neatly-typed business envelope,
laser-printed on heavy paper? Or is it a blurry inkjet printout on the lowest
grade of bond paper, folded up double and stuffed into a small envelope? You
can guess which of these two letters is going to make a positive impression.
It’s worth investing a few dollars in the proper grade of paper and the right
kind of matching envelope – you don’t need to spend a fortune, but you do need
to print your letter on something other than the recycled dot-matrix paper
you’ve been storing in the attic since 1984. If you don’t have a quality
printer in your home office, then use the laser printers at Kinko’s or your
local business center – even the library often has printers available for
public use.
But let’s look beyond
old-school paper submissions. What about impressions resulting from job
inquiries sent by email? When applying for employment, do your email
attachments open properly? Do your docs look crisp on screen?
In
making your first impression via the cover letter, you need to ensure that the
letter appears professional (whether sent via email, fax, or mail), that the
content is relevant and appropriate, and that your letter adds value to your
application or resume. A phoned-in, cookie-cutter cover letter is better than
no letter at all, sure, but a good letter can step your candidacy up a notch.
Take every opportunity to improve your cover letter, so it opens a few more doors.