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Cover letter or not to Cover letter? resume page example ?

Question:
Cover letter or not to Cover letter? resume page example ? Should one include a cover letter when applying for a job via email or is the email body itself essencially the cover letter?

I personally want to see a short to the point cover letter "like" email with the resume attached in TXT and DOC formats.

What do you think?


Answer:
- is it better practice these days to send PDF files instead of DOC's? Not everyone uses Windows but some HR people are pretty clueless when it comes to computers (no offense intended)

-I personally think if you are applying executive level work or any positions above that, you should summit cover letter. If you are applying some entry level position, you'd better not summit cover letter. It is because HR staff might need to read hundreds of resume a day. A long resume with cover letter might double or trible his/her work. But, if you are applying some positions which require high level written skill, you might need to summit cover letter. As my own experience, people usualy perfect resume and cover letter in MS Word format.

-I would *always* include a cover letter, unless it's a low entry-level position with a detailed application, and probably even then. The cover letter lets you highlight the most relevant portions of your resume, describe how your skills and experience best match the job you're applying for, and drop any names you might want to (if you were referred by a current employee, for example, or if the interviewer went to your alma mater.

Fo e-mail applications, the cover letter can be the body of the e-mail; I usually send a cover letter followed by a plain ASCII resume, an attached .doc or PDF (unless they specify another format), and a link to the resume on my Web site. If an employer doesn't specify a format, the redundancy is a good thing. It would really suck for your resume to be unread because of the wrong file format or to look like hell because the interviewer lacks a font.

A few other thoughts: I don't have an "objectives" section on the resume. It's pointless sucking up. And I'm adamant that a resume should be one page. Always. More than one page, and it's a CV. Shorten descriptions of old and irrelevant jobs to one or two lines. If you're more than a few years out of college, you don't need to list all your extracurriculars. If you've graduated from college, high school shouldn't get more than a sentence, if that. You don't need to say "references available on request"; it's assumed.


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