Files
2025-11-30 08:52:43 +08:00

4.6 KiB

Cover Letter Best Practices

Structure and Content Guidelines

Opening Paragraph Elements

  • Specific position title
  • How you learned about the opportunity (if relevant)
  • Brief compelling hook (your unique value in 1-2 sentences)
  • Genuine enthusiasm for the role

Body Paragraph Strategy

Selection Criteria Addressing Format:

  1. Lead with the criterion or requirement
  2. Provide specific evidence from past experience
  3. Include quantifiable results when possible
  4. Connect to organizational needs
  5. Show progression and growth

Example Pattern: "Your requirement for [specific criterion] aligns perfectly with my experience in [area]. At [Company], I [specific achievement with quantifiable result], which [benefit/outcome]. This demonstrates [capability/skill] that I would bring to [aspect of new role]."

Closing Paragraph Checklist

  • Reiterate 2-3 key strengths
  • Express genuine interest in organization
  • Request for interview/further discussion
  • Thank you statement
  • Reference to attached/enclosed CV

Tone and Language

Effective Action Verbs

Leadership: Led, directed, orchestrated, championed, spearheaded, guided Achievement: Achieved, delivered, exceeded, attained, accomplished, realized Innovation: Developed, created, designed, implemented, established, pioneered Improvement: Enhanced, optimized, streamlined, transformed, upgraded, modernized Problem-Solving: Resolved, diagnosed, remediated, troubleshot, addressed, mitigated Collaboration: Partnered, collaborated, coordinated, facilitated, engaged, aligned

What to Avoid

  • Passive voice: "Was responsible for" → "Led" or "Managed"
  • Weak qualifiers: "Helped with," "Assisted in," "Somewhat experienced"
  • Generic claims: "Hard worker," "Team player," "Fast learner"
  • Clichés: "Think outside the box," "Hit the ground running"
  • Apologetic language: "Although I haven't," "While I may lack"
  • Presumptuous statements: "I look forward to starting," "When I join your team"

Quantification Guidelines

Metrics to Include

  • Percentage improvements (efficiency, performance, revenue)
  • Time savings or speed improvements
  • Cost reductions or budget management
  • Team sizes led or supported
  • Project scope (users affected, systems managed)
  • Compliance or quality improvements

Quantification Examples

Before: "Improved system performance" After: "Improved system performance by 40%, reducing page load time from 5 seconds to 3 seconds"

Before: "Managed cybersecurity incident" After: "Led critical cyberattack response, restoring all affected systems within 12 hours and preventing estimated $200K+ in potential damages"


Addressing Selection Criteria

Direct Addressing Template

"Your requirement for [criterion] is demonstrated through my [X years] of experience in [field/role]. Specifically, at [Organization], I [achievement with metrics] which [outcome/benefit]. This experience has equipped me with [skills/knowledge] directly applicable to [aspect of advertised role]."

Transferable Skills Approach

When experience doesn't directly match: "While my background is in [your field], the [specific skills/competencies] required for [criterion] align closely with my experience in [related area]. For example, [specific achievement] demonstrates [transferable capability] that would enable me to [contribution to new role]."


Customization Checklist

Before sending cover letter, verify:

  • Company name spelled correctly throughout
  • Position title matches advertisement exactly
  • Industry-specific terminology used appropriately
  • Organizational values or mission referenced
  • No generic template language remaining
  • Tone matches company culture (formal vs. contemporary)
  • All claims supported by CV evidence
  • Contact information matches CV exactly

Length Guidelines

  • Ideal: 300-450 words (3-4 paragraphs)
  • Maximum: 500 words
  • Opening: 3-4 sentences
  • Body: 2-3 paragraphs (4-6 sentences each)
  • Closing: 3-4 sentences

Common Mistakes

  1. Repeating CV without adding value - Use cover letter to provide context and narrative
  2. Focusing on what job offers you - Focus on what you offer the organization
  3. Generic applications - Must be tailored to specific role and organization
  4. Poor evidence - Vague claims without specific examples
  5. Wrong tone - Too casual, too formal, or mismatched to culture
  6. Typos and errors - Proofread multiple times
  7. Missing selection criteria - Every key criterion must be addressed
  8. Too long - Hiring managers spend 30 seconds on first review