When it comes to landing your dream job, your cover letter can be your strongest ally. A well-crafted cover letter goes beyond just reiterating your resume—it’s a chance to showcase your personality, highlight your relevant skills and explain why you’re the perfect fit for the position. In a competitive job market, standing out is crucial and a thoughtfully written cover letter can catch the right attention.
Below, Forbes Human Resources Council members share advice on 20 essential components that every potential employee should include in their cover letters to make a lasting impression and increase their chances of securing an interview.
1. Tailor Your Cover Letter To A Specific Role
If asked for a cover letter, make it meaningful and use the opportunity to show a potential employer you did your homework. Don’t miss an opportunity to bring your unique voice to your application, and be sure to make it relevant to the specific role. Employers, if you want to read something interesting, ask for it! Put the effort in, too—ask candidates to respond to a creative prompt.
2. Share The Context That Supports Your Resume
Cover letters are tricky. I don’t just want your sales pitch. I want to see the context that supports and informs your quantifiable impact and accomplishments in your career. The cover letter is your opportunity to share the context that supports the resume, not regurgitate it.
3. Let Your Personality Shine Through
Your cover letter is an excellent opportunity to highlight your past accomplishments and how they can benefit this potential employer. All accomplishments should be personalized to the specific role you’re applying for. It’s also a great way to let your personality shine through. Doing something a little different will often catch the hiring manager’s eye and make you stand out.
4. Demonstrate How You Will Fit In With The Culture
As culture is moving to the forefront, many companies are looking more for cultural fit. Cover letters should connect your character traits and practices to that of the company’s core values and culture indicators, which makes it easier for companies to visualize a great fit.
5. Create A Compelling And Tailored Narrative
The most important thing for candidates to include in their cover letters is a compelling and tailored narrative that effectively communicates their qualifications, experience, enthusiasm, unique selling points, company knowledge and alignment with the job requirements. Tailor each letter, be concise, proofread and include contact information.
6. Explain Questions That Arise About Your Resume
A cover letter can show your story. Were you laid off? Did you take time off to have a family? What did you learn from your time off of work? It is a great way to explain resume gaps, highlight training or education, add additional skills and abilities and explain any other situations. It gives the recruiter and hiring manager a chance to get to know more about you.
7. Treat Your Cover Letter As A Mission Statement
Your cover letter is a mission statement, presenting not what you can do but why you do it. In a tough market with an abundance of qualified candidates, you need to differentiate yourself with personality and aspirations. Recruiters are looking for your passion for the company and why your values match the company’s mission—stand out as a candidate who will have drive behind their work.
8. Do Your Research And Demonstrate Your Knowledge Of The Company
Cover letters that stand out demonstrate a potential employee’s deep knowledge of the company and why they want to work there. Cover letters should not be vague or formulaic. Candidates who want to land a job need to take the time to do their research, get to know the company and be specific about why they are a good fit.
9. Outline Two Tangible Accomplishments And Keep It Brief
Keep it brief. Outline two tangible accomplishments that showcase ownership, collaboration and determination to succeed. Also, it is important to not repeat what is included in your resume. Instead, connect specific and relevant information that highlights your communication and critical thinking skills, and your growth and progressive mindset. Lastly, what is your value to the company?
10. Demonstrate How Your Skills Are Transferable And Adaptable
Talent agility is key for organizations in this era of technological innovation. Demonstrate what skills you have in your backpack and how those are transferable and adaptable across different kinds of work and roles. Given the shrinking shelf-life of skills, it’s also a huge advantage to show an appetite for continuous learning so that you can grow and pivot with the organization.
11. Be Present On Social Media, Especially LinkedIn
Cover letters are a practice that is a little outdated. CVs, too. Keep your LinkedIn profile up to date and add as many details as you can there. Write articles or be present on social channels. And if you want to add an extra flavor to your application, record a short video highlighting why you are the best person for this role.
12. Be Specific About What Excites You
Candidates should explain why they are enthusiastic about the job. Organizations want skilled employees, but they also want employees who will bring positive energy to work and contribute to the culture. By being specific about what excites them about the role, candidates demonstrate their ability to drive culture, engagement and productivity.
13. State Your Value Proposition Clearly
Some may argue that the cover letter’s crown jewel is your value proposition: what you can offer that no one else can. This isn’t merely a repetition of your CV. Instead, it’s a story about how your unique skills and experiences make you the right person for the job. Conveying this effectively can set you apart from the crowd. What makes you unique? What is your superpower?
14. Highlight Your Value As A New Hire
Always intertwine the mission, vision and values of the organization into your message. It allows the reader to easily convey which skills and experiences support and relate to the company’s specific values and aspects of the vision and mission. Also, using the mission, vision and values to describe how you plan to address conflict and company challenges will highlight your value as a new hire.
15. Choose The Appropriate Format To Submit
Are cover letters passé? Maybe. Maybe not. Many employers describe the value of cover letters as a means for the candidate to highlight their alignment of values and skills, yet so many cover letters go unread or skimmed at best. If applying for a writing position, then adhering to the tradition might be a good idea. If not, consider replacing the written document with a quick and entertaining video clip that exposes personality and fit!
16. Prepare Your Digital Footprint As Well
A cover letter may still be expected, but is it really needed? In today’s world, let your digital footprint tell your story. Make sure your online brand and resume—your LinkedIn account and social media channels—are updated, professional and competition-ready. A cover letter is fine, but it doesn’t tell your whole story.
17. Make Your Cover Letter Interactive
Cover letters can be seen as outdated and offer little space to tell a truly impactful story. So, work with that and create a differentiated and interactive cover letter that engages the reader. Add a QR code to your LinkedIn profile, a custom microsite or portfolio, social media accounts, or a personalized video message that shows your passion (free tools exist). Branding 101—get creative to stand out.
18. Treat Your Cover Letter And Resume As Marketing Materials
Cover letters continue to be controversial in their value proposition. Some recruiters and managers may say the most important thing to include is to not submit a cover letter at all. That said, if you are including a cover letter, use that to differentiate and capture the attention of the reader. Cover letters and resumes are marketing documents so choose your words and tone wisely.
19. Highlight Your Most Significant Accomplishments
Cover letters are not an effective tool in the modern job market but they can supplement a resume if written in formal, explicit language. It should be well-organized, concise and accurate, highlighting the candidate’s most significant accomplishments on projects or tasks. The key to overcoming an employer’s preconceptions about all job applicants is to highlight relevant skills and experience.
20. Sell Who You Are And Your Superpower
As cover letters start to fall out of trend, the employers that require them are even more likely to read them. So don’t miss the opportunity to sell who you are, how you align with the role and the superpower that makes you rise above the other candidates.