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Job Hunter Newsletter
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The Reality of Cover Letters

Disclaimer: please note that all of the links were active as of the newsletter publication, but some may become inactive over time.

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IN THIS ISSUE:

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Contents

- Job Search Tip of the Week, by Brian Krueger, author of "College Grad Job Hunter," the #1 book for entry level job search:

"The Reality of Cover Letters"

Why are cover letters limited in value? Three reasons. First, most people assume that the cover letter is actually read before the resume. Wrong. Just ask those who spend any portion of the work day reviewing resumes--they typically go past the cover letter directly to the resume and only look at the cover letter if they are still interested after their initial resume review. In my review of more than 40,000 resumes, I have probably read only 8,000 cover letters. It is actually rather amusing to watch a Hiring Manager reading a newly arrived resume. The cover letter and resume are pulled from the envelope, the cover letter is immediately placed behind the resume, and the resume is scanned first, then read. And you know there is interest if they finally make their way back to the cover letter.

Second, most people assume that the cover letter should be about you. Wrong again. It should be about the company, your prospect, your target. Your resume will tell them everything they need to know about you (if it is well written). If you are interested enough in the company to make an initial contact, you should take the time to fully reflect your understanding of the company and how you may be able meet their needs in your cover letter.

Third, and most important, many college students end up using the cover letter/resume mass mailing as a crutch to convince themselves that they are actually doing something in their job search. "But I sent out over 200 resumes!" In reality, all they are doing is generating rejection letters. Mass mailing of your cover letter and resume has extremely low odds for success in today's job market.

Please understand that at the entry level a resume and cover letter on their own do little good. Most larger companies have established college recruiting programs that serve as the focal point of entry level hiring. Therefore, unsolicited entry level resumes are often ignored and filed away. Most medium and small companies do not have the internal resources to train entry level hires, so the entry level resume will again be ignored. The best you can hope for in a blind mailing campaign is that you will be filed away and perhaps miraculously resurrected at some future date. Very unlikely.

Next newsletter: "The Best Use of a Cover Letter"

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Contents

- Help Spread The Word!

Do you know of someone who can benefit from the information in this newsletter? Simply forward this e-mail to them and tell them to subscribe at http://www.CollegeGrad.com/newsletter. Thanks for spreading the good word!

Contents

Job Search Links:

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Contents

- Job Search Book Online

There are at least two other entry level Web sites that offer books on job searching, proclaming that they will tell you everything you need to know about entry level job search.

However, there is a very important point about these books they don't mention up front: they cost money.

At CollegeGrad.com, we give you two things they don't:

    1. The #1 entry level job search book ("College Grad Job Hunter").
    2. It's free.

It's that simple. So don't buy the hype. Read the real information you need for FREE:

Don't ever pay for books or reports or resources of lower quality when you can access the very best quality information for free.

P.S. Yes, you can buy "College Grad Job Hunter" in hardcopy format as well at Amazon.com for $15 (actually, 30% off that price), but the online version is better. Why? Because the version at Amazon.com (the 2003 edition) is being continually updated at CollegeGrad.com. So the most current version of the book is actually the online, free version.

Contents

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