Cover letter layout

Your cover letter should ideally:

  • Be tailored to the job posting, role and organization you’re applying to

  • Highlight and expand on those skills, qualifications and experiences from your résumé (typically included in the Summary of qualifications section or equivalent) that meet the skills and experience requirements from the job posting

  • Provide an opportunity for you to include examples of how your unique experiences have given you the transferrable skills and competencies required to excel in the position

  • Explain why you’re interested in working for the organization

  • Outline how the organization would benefit from hiring you

  • Provide more context for an unconventional educational background, professional experience, career transition, etc.

  • Reflect your personality, attitude, values and communication skills

  • Demonstrate your research and writing skills

Creating application documents is a process of targeting your message to a specific audience: your potential employer. Tailoring application materials will prepare you for the storytelling you may do in the next stages of the application, particularly interviews!

 

Do I have to include a cover letter with my résumé?

Drafting targeted cover letters can be a time-consuming process. However, although there are exceptions, it’s most often to your benefit to include a cover letter – and you must do so when the posting states to include one!

If you are submitting your résumé online for a posted job, be sure to follow the instructions. If there are no instructions or they’re unclear, it’s typically a good idea to include a cover letter. You may include a brief note in the body of your email, but it’s typically best to attach a cover letter document along with your résumé even if a cover letter has not been requested. Doing so will make you stand out from other candidates who have not included one (Crosby, 1999, Crosby & Liming, 2009).

For co-op applications specifically, the cover letter is optional unless noted otherwise, so you may want to focus on writing cover letters for the positions that are most important to you.

If an online application system allows you to submit only one document, you could consider combining the cover letter and résumé into one document.

 

How do I format a cover letter?

  • Length – typically 1 page but in some cases longer is permitted (refer to application instructions, if they exist, to guide your decision)

  • Typically 3+ paragraphs

  • Layout - ½ inch to 1-inch margins

  • Font - 10 to 12 size font (match your résumé font style and size)

  • Header- You may include the same header as your résumé since it’s expected that the résumé and cover letter are submitted together

  • Date - Common to include the date

  • Position title – Include the position number as well if there is one in the job ad

  • Contact information: Include the employer’s contact information

  • Address the cover letter to “Dear Hiring Manager,” “Dear Hiring Committee,” or “Dear Recruiter” if you do not know their name. It’s more personal to address the letter to a specific person, so if you know or can research and find out with certainty the hiring manager’s full name, include it (first and last names). Avoid using gendered titles such as “Mr” or “Mrs” unless the job ad specifically includes those titles.

  • Sign off with an e-signature or typed signature

  • Write in the first person (‘I,’ ‘me’) and use complete sentences (for impact, key points can be included in a bulleted list)

 

There are many ways people use to map out an outline of their cover letter. Below is an approach that uses a table. Another option might be to use different coloured highlighters to categorize important pieces of information from the job posting. Feel free to move the text in the job posting around so that information is grouped by skill or theme in a way that makes sense to you. (If you do this, save a copy of the original job ad for future reference!)

Expand the following content for more information.

  1. Start from the job description. Take note of the qualifications the employer is seeking. In situations where there is very limited information on the job posting, consider sourcing a job posting for an equivalent role.

  2. Identify what you consider to be the top 2 - 4 most important job requirements. You can sometimes determine the highest priority by noting the order in which an item appears (those near the top of a job ad tend to be the most important) and/or the number of instances a term is mentioned.

  3. Using the chart below, record these under ‘Job requirements’ in the left column, doing your best to rank them from most to least important.

  1. Next, select personal examples that best match the requirements that you’ve identified as most critical for the job. These could be skills, competencies, education, training, values and personality traits. Some helpful prompts might be:

    1. What have I done that best demonstrates each of the top job requirements?

    2. If I have a lot of evidence, which is the most compelling to include?

  1. Using the chart below, record your examples in the middle column.

  1. Review the connection between the top job requirements you’ve identified (Column 1) and the evidence that you have it (Column 2).

  2. Reflect on your accomplishments, contributions and/or approach for each job requirement.

  3. Using the chart below, draft complete statements or notes (or a combination) for each job requirement in the “Completed statements or notes” column. These will come in handy when you begin to create the first draft of your cover letter.

Preparing to write cover letter – chart

  1. Job requirements- Ranked in order of importance

  1. Evidence I have it

  1. Completed statements or notes

  1. Job requirements- Ranked in order of importance

  1. Evidence I have it

  1. Completed statements or notes

Example:

Respond to client questions and concerns, resolve customer complaints and escalate issues appropriately.

Example:

Summer job at Rogers

Example:

  • Handled customer phone inquiries

  • Triaged customer concerns

  • Deescalated where possible

  • Escalated to manager when needed



Crosby, O. (1999). Resumes, Applications, and Cover Letters. Occupational Outlook Quarterly, 43(2).