Cover
Letters
As an educator and coordinator at learning
centers, I have seen my share of cover letters; and as a freelance
writer who submits to publishers, enters writing competitions, and bids
on writing projects every month, I have written more than my share of
cover letters. While I would not imply any special expertise,
I would suggest a few steps to take or things to keep in mind as you
write your own covers.
Know that you have something like three seconds to make an impression
on a busy reader. Be he a board member considering which
students to admit or be she a CEO determining the best candidate for
the position that just opened up, the reader is likely slogging through
hundreds of cover letters and will need, therefore, to use a process of
elimination. Avoid being tossed into the
“NO” pile.
In your greeting, use the name of the person or persons doing the
hiring or accepting—if you can get this
information. If you can, call the company and ask to whom you
should address your cover. If you are applying online, in
response to an online call for workers, do your homework by researching
the company and finding names in the “About Us”
pages of the company’s site. If you absolutely
cannot find a name, be careful to avoid the antiquated “Dear
Sir,” as in this age of gender equality, you are just as
likely if not more so to be writing to a woman. If you have a
name, use it; that is, do not assume the first name is gender-specific
and mistakenly write “Dear Mz. Thing” just because
the first name is Gayle, or “Hello Mr. So-and-so”
because the first name is Sam.
Identify in the body of your cover letters why you would be good for
the position/slot—NOT why or how much you want to be
accepted/hired. Use this valuable space to point out
important skills, experience, and abilities, with specific
examples. That is, instead of saying what a positive attitude
you have and what a team player you are, write how your five years as a
PEACE CORPS worker points to your abilities to give optimum service to
others in need. Just because you WANT the job
doesn’t prove you are right for it, in other words.
Okay, so you might say, “But that information is all in my
résumé/vitae!” Yes, but it is
likely in the résumés/vitas of the other
applicants, too. And your selling of yourself starts with the
cover letters you use as encapsulated versions of your history and as a
greeting or calling card, if you will, which has limited space to snag
the readers’ attentions.
Be sure to spell correctly. Especially, spell the
people’s names and the company names correctly.
Nothing says “I will be a sub-par employee who gives little
attention to detail” like the cover letters that are left
un-proofed and un-revised. Use a spell-checker, yes, but also
manually check or have someone objective check, for words such as
homonyms (too/to/two, bear/bare) elude the spell-checker, as do
contextual words…any words that are real words spelled
correctly but used in the wrong context. I once had to write
cover letters to the local libraries, asking for support for a pilot
program for students. In the closing, I noted that we at XYZ
wanted to do the breast job possible. This would have, as you
can imagine, been a nightmarish mistake had I not caught it with my own
eyes (after having spell-checked).
So go out and get that job or launch yourself into one of the few seats
in the department at that graduate school. Be the one who
stands out. Be the writer of the cover letters that makes
potential employers or educators stop, laugh, say,
“Wow,” or say “Yes!” rather
than the one whose paperwork gets an automatic
“No.”
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