Anthony Balderrama, CareerBuilder.com writer
You can feel a little directionless during a job hunt. At times, the questions seem to outnumber the answers two-to-one.
Do I need to wear a suit? Do I need to send a thank-you note? What is my biggest weakness? How do I give a good handshake? The stress can be overwhelming. One question that still pesters job seekers, especially as job hunting increasingly takes place online, is whether or not a cover letter is still necessary. On the one hand, a cover letter is a traditional component of the searching process and omitting one feels weird. But time is valuable during a job hunt and wasting time on something nobody will read is aggravating.
Anthony Balderrama, CareerBuilder.com writer
You can feel a little directionless during a job hunt. At times, the questions seem to outnumber the answers two-to-one.
Do I need to wear a suit? Do I need to send a thank-you note? What is my biggest weakness? How do I give a good handshake? The stress can be overwhelming. One question that still pesters job seekers, especially as job hunting increasingly takes place online, is whether or not a cover letter is still necessary. On the one hand, a cover letter is a traditional component of the searching process and omitting one feels weird. But time is valuable during a job hunt and wasting time on something nobody will read is aggravating.
So are cover letters a waste of time or an overlooked attention grabber?
Find a Job
Search by Company | Search by IndustryOverwhelmingly, hiring managers and human resources personnel view cover letters as a necessity in the job hunt.
How a cover letter helps you
When you submit an application or resume to an employer, you probably haven't spoken at length with the hiring manager. Therefore your papers are one needle in a huge haystack of applicants. Your goal is to set yourself apart as quickly as possible and not to give the hiring manager any reason to dismiss you from consideration -- a cover letter can help you achieve that goal.
"Employers need to know you know how to communicate in writing," says Sue Thompson, a personal coach and corporate trainer. "Your resume may have been done professionally or using a template, and you may have done a good job of proofreading. But a cover letter shows you have the ability to put sentences together and sound like a halfway intelligent person. It will reveal whether your education has any merit: Are words spelled properly? Is the grammar correct? Is the punctuation appropriate?"
You can look at the cover letter as a way to convince the hiring manager to consider you for the job. Or, if fear is a better motivator, think about the lack of a cover letter, or one written poorly, as a strike against you.
"You can be the smartest person within 100 miles, and maybe the right person for the job, but you will knock yourself right out of the running with a poor cover letter. You make the recruiter's job easier when they see a poorly written, poorly proofread cover letter. They can discard your resume and move on," Thompson adds.
The need to craft a strong cover letter cannot be stressed enough, however. When you gave your parents homemade birthday cards as a child, they lovingly accepted them because it's the thought that counts. That's not the case with cover letters, so your typos and sloppy presentation are detrimental, not endearing.
Connect the dots
Job coach and former recruiter Judi Perkins wants job seekers to understand the role of well-written cover letter. "When they're written correctly, they're extremely effective, because they're a sales tool." And the secret to this sales tool is taking a two-pronged approach to the cover letter.
"The first part: The key is that cover letters need to be focused on what the buyer -- the hiring company -- wants," Perkins says. This means you need to look at the ad and see what it's asking for because that's what the employer is looking for, too. "The ad tells you, explicitly, what that company wants."
"But here's the second part -- the kicker -- that no one else even teaches (and even professional sales people don't do): Bridge the benefit back to the company; spell out the benefit of hiring you."
Simply put, you know what the company wants and you know what you can offer -- your resume is a list of your accomplishments, after all. So Perkins suggests you just connect the dots for you readers.
"It forces them to visualize the effect of you in the business as an employee. They're not going to take this step themselves -- there are too many resumes to go through. Spell everything out for them and it gives you a distinct leg up over all the other vastly ineffective cover letters that they receive."
The new cover letter
Job hunting has changed quite a bit since the advent of the Internet, as many of today's job seekers have probably never applied for a job via the mail. This means that the practice of placing a cover letter and resume in an envelope and mailing it is antiquated for many companies. But does that mean you have to write an e-mail to the employer and attach both the cover letter and resume or do you skip the cover letter when applying online?
"The growing prevalence of applying via e-mail or through an organization's Web site is making cover letters obsolete in most industries," according to Wes Henricksen, president of Seize the A, an academic consulting organization. "That does not mean that the ability to write a cover letter has become obsolete. Instead, it means the rules have changed. The new 'cover letter' is often a shorter two-paragraph message in the body of an e-mail. Although this new "cover e-mail" is shorter and less formal, its content is no less important than that of a traditional cover letter. Style, spelling, grammar and professionalism are all still vitally important."
What employers think
You know how a good cover letter can work to your advantage, but what if you don't submit one? Are you doomed? For some employers, such as Angela Ruggiero, yes. She's an adviser for Stanton Communications' internship program. As a new graduate, she didn't bother with a cover letter, and now she realizes her mistake.
"I see red flags when there is no cover letter along with a resume," Ruggiero says. "The absence of cover letters translates to me that the candidate is lazy and is sending resumes in masses, rather than customizing or personalizing to each individual company of interest."
While the absence of a cover letter might land you in the rejected pile, the inclusion of one could keep you at the top of the shortlist. "Sometimes a person's cover letter drives me to call a candidate for an interview over another who may have had qualifications that were just as impressive."
You could save yourself some time and not write a cover letter, which has a decent shot of hurting your job prospects. Or you could devote the time to write a thorough but brief letter that -- at worst -- isn't read and -- at best -- lands you a job. Not a tough call.
>>>Next: Resume How-to>>> 10 Vital Resume Fixes
>>> Job Hunt Survival Kit
Anthony Balderrama is a writer and blogger for CareerBuilder.com. He researches and writes about job search strategy, career management, hiring trends and workplace issues.
Copyright 2009 CareerBuilder.com




Mar 2nd 2009 @ 12:12AM startnowcareers
You’ve heard it said, “You only have one chance to make a first impression.” For the job seeker, that impression is your resume.
At the end of a job fair held in Greensboro, NC on February 25, 2009, an HR Director was interviewed on one of the local news stations. “The biggest problem an applicant has,” he said, “is their resume.”
He went on to indicate how vitally important it is to make sure your resume is:
- worded properly,
- kept concise,
- typed in proper font size and style, and
- matches your objective to the position you’re applying for.
StartNowCareerGuide.com helps you create the strongest, most effective document that will shoot your resume to the top of the pile.
We’ll help you discover experiences and qualifications you may have overlooked… talents that will have hiring managers take notice. And we’ll show you how to make it look picture perfect.
Visit our website: StartNowCareerGuide.com
View the samples on the site, and if you don't feel this guide provides what you need in your search, e-mail us at startnowcareers@aol.com and tell us why. Our goal is to help you get the job you’re seeking!
Reply
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 4:18PM Bonnelle Viera Martel
Would like a sample of the new type cover letter
Mar 2nd 2009 @ 2:26PM John
The country is fresh out of CEOs. A resume is sent to people that have a job, and an empty waste basket.
They got theirs....you ain't gettin' yours!
Reply
Mar 5th 2009 @ 11:23AM startnowcareers
Hi John -
I can easily understand why you feel that way. Job searching can be one of the most discouraging events in a person's life. And I know this is going to sound trite, but a positive frame of mind is needed and ALL methods of search are required.
Too often, people feel they can just post to Monster, CareerBuilder or HotJobs and the job of their dreams will land in their laps. Those who do can tell you that's not the answer.
Your new full-time job is now looking for a job. How you go about it will prove the results. As this article suggests, cover letters are necessary, as are thank-you letters, networking letters and acceptance letters. These things are equal to writing your resume to bring out the best of your work experiences.
Don't give up...get educated. Find resources to help you.
Check my web site: http://www.startnowcareerguide.com as well as my blog: http://startnowcareers.blogspot.com/
Good luck in your search!
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 2:43PM Jason
So basically you have no job skills and are trying to convince yourself that no one in the world is ever going to get a job again? Yeah that sounds rational.
Mar 4th 2009 @ 3:35PM Jerry L.Finley
To whom it may concern:
Please send me a rough draft of a cover letter on customer service, with a focus area of "Client Relations Management.
Thank you,
Jerry L.Finley
Reply
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 2:29PM Suzanne
John and other job seekers. It is awfully difficult out there right now, but we (HR, Personnel folk) still need to hire the right person for the right job. Approach the search with enthusiasm and use the cover letter to express your outstanding qualifications. Say it simply and truthfully. We at the other side of the desk appreciate the effort it takes to put a good presentation together.
Reply
Mar 4th 2009 @ 10:26PM namvette68
It is tough to work long for an employer that knows nothing about what he is doing. I can see why the country is in dire straits.
Employers are afraid of someone that is more competent. I guess old people are relegated to being a "greeter" at Walmart.
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 3:26PM David White
Speaking as a recruiter, I would say that the same effort and communication is needed for the Career Summary that should be at the top of every resume. Use that section to align your experience to the job and where appropriate, add your brag points or relevant accomplishments to set yourself apart from the other applicants.
Lose the "Objective" -- companies don't care what you want; they want to know what you can do and have done.
David White
Sr. Recruiter, financial and legal
First Associates,Ltd
Chicago, IL
Reply
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 7:08PM Lynette
I take it, there must be some reason that you included your business. Do you have out "free" resume/job advice?
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 4:00PM Lauren
The author stresses the importance of proofreading... "so your typos and sloppy presentation are detrimental, not endearing." and then continues with "your resume is a list of your accomplishments, after all. So Perkins suggests you just connect the dots for you readers." "you readers" or "your readers"?
I guess even those giving advice need to take it from time to time as well. Thanks for the tips.
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Mar 3rd 2009 @ 2:47PM Russ
I was always told "Its not what you know, its WHO you know" most of all the top paying jobs will be filled by referral and not by a Resume. I work full-time for some real go-getters....NOT. I do make extra money from home, a few extra thousand a month, http://www.community4wealth.com I have found that the only person you can count on to survive is you!! Take a look...
Reply
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 3:06PM Cathy
You can spend hours wasting your time pumping out a resume fit for the gods, yet you can bet that job you're hoping for will be given to one of those H1B Visa holders from India or China.
CNN: There is no shortage of programs to import foreign workers into the American economy. It's an alphabet soup. There's the B-1, the H-1A, the H-1B, the H-1C, the H-2A, the H-2B and the H-W. Then there's the O-series, 1, 2, and 3. The P's, 1, 2, 3, 4, and the Q's, 1, 2, and 3. And the R series, R-1 and R-2.
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Mar 3rd 2009 @ 3:10PM Brennan
“The biggest problem an applicant has,” he said, “is their resume.” The HR person has a problem - "an applicant" is singular and "their" is plural; the correction would be "an applicant has is his (or her) resume". Wasn't the article about grammar etc?
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Mar 3rd 2009 @ 5:05PM patty
also in he paragraph starting with "Simply put...at the end it should be YOUR readers not YOU readers....jeeeze!!!!
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 6:54PM rrrrrrcambel
Good job Brennan and Laura I only hope Mr. Balderrama sees your coments and takes sometime to take some grammar lessons and check himself and see that he is not perfect either, even after so many years of writting so many articles and criticing other people'grammar and resumes.
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 7:09PM Janet
I'm so with you, there! Grammar has gone casual these days. It seems even MBAs make stupid errors. I always got "corrected" when I wrote "his or her." I was told it was stiff, awkward and outdated. Another pet peeve of mine is referring to a person as "that." We're looking for a young lady that appreciates..." It should be (in my book) "We're looking for a young lady WHO..."
But I guess that's too personal.
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 3:17PM Danita
Nope! None required! And it doesn't get any better than this! You get to work for yourself and enjoy what you do! Set your own schedule! Meet lots of great people doing the same thing. Travel all around at really cheap rates! Help others to do the same and have your own thriving business! Be determined that this year will be different than last year! http://www.danita.mydfilive.com
Reply
Mar 3rd 2009 @ 3:23PM wondering
Balderrama writes, "So Perkins suggests you just connect the dots for you readers." Uses you for your in an article warning against typos and sloppiness. Love it!
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Mar 3rd 2009 @ 6:32PM Janet
It gets even better... "Judi Perkins wants applicants to understand the role of well-written cover letter." Balderrama left out the "a." There was another one, too. Spell check doesn't find everything. I used to have a boss who would ream me via email if I made even the tiniest error, yet her email rants usually contained one big one, at least! I guess the rules don't apply to everyone.