home / skills / paramchoudhary / resumeskills / cover-letter-generator

cover-letter-generator skill

/skills/cover-letter-generator

This skill generates personalized cover letters from resume and job description, matching tone, highlighting qualifications, and crafting compelling openings.

npx playbooks add skill paramchoudhary/resumeskills --skill cover-letter-generator

Review the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.

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SKILL.md
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---
name: Cover Letter Generator
description: Create personalized, compelling cover letters from resume and job description
---

# Cover Letter Generator

## When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when the user wants to:
- Write a cover letter for a job application
- Create a personalized application letter
- Address specific job requirements in letter format
- Mentions: "cover letter", "application letter", "write cover letter", "letter for job"

Use AFTER analyzing job description to have clear talking points.

## Core Capabilities

- Generate personalized cover letters from resume + job description
- Match tone to company culture
- Address qualification gaps strategically
- Create compelling opening hooks
- Structure persuasive arguments for candidacy
- Maintain authenticity while selling effectively

## Cover Letter Philosophy

**The Problem:** Most cover letters are generic, boring, and add no value beyond the resume.

**The Solution:** A great cover letter should:
1. Show you've researched the company
2. Connect YOUR specific experience to THEIR specific needs
3. Address the "why you, why now, why here" questions
4. Add personality and context a resume can't convey

## The Perfect Cover Letter Structure

### Length & Format
- **Length:** 250-400 words (3-4 paragraphs)
- **Format:** Professional business letter style
- **Tone:** Confident but not arrogant, personalized but professional

### Structure Overview
```
[Your Contact Info]
[Date]
[Recipient Info]

Opening Paragraph: Hook + Position + Why This Company (2-3 sentences)

Body Paragraph 1: Your strongest qualification match (3-4 sentences)

Body Paragraph 2: Additional qualifications + address any gaps (3-4 sentences)

Closing Paragraph: Call to action + enthusiasm (2-3 sentences)

[Professional Sign-off]
```

## Opening Paragraph Strategies

The opening is critical - you have 5 seconds to grab attention.

### Hook Types (Choose One)

**1. Specific Company Knowledge**
```
"I was excited to see TechCorp's recent launch of your API marketplace - as a Product Manager who's spent 3 years building developer tools, I immediately saw how my experience could accelerate your platform growth."
```

**2. Mutual Connection**
```
"Sarah Chen on your engineering team mentioned you're looking for a PM to lead the payments initiative. Having worked with Sarah at [Previous Company] and led payment integrations at [Current Company], I'd love to discuss how I could contribute."
```

**3. Problem-Solver**
```
"Your job description mentions the challenge of aligning technical and business stakeholders - I've navigated this exact challenge, successfully launching 8 products by building shared roadmap visibility across engineering, sales, and executive teams."
```

**4. Impressive Achievement**
```
"Last year, I led a product that grew from 0 to 100K users in 6 months. I'm excited about the opportunity to bring that growth mindset to [Company]'s expanding product line."
```

**5. Industry Insight**
```
"The B2B payments space is at an inflection point, and [Company]'s approach to embedded finance positions you perfectly for the next wave. As someone who's been building in fintech for 5 years, I'd love to contribute to that growth."
```

### Opening Don'ts
- ❌ "I am writing to apply for..." (boring, obvious)
- ❌ "I am the perfect candidate..." (let them decide)
- ❌ "I saw your job posting on LinkedIn..." (generic)
- ❌ Starting with "I" (start with them or a hook)

## Body Paragraph Frameworks

### Body Paragraph 1: Direct Match

Connect your strongest experience to their top requirement.

**Formula:** [Their Need] + [Your Exact Experience] + [Specific Result]

```
Your focus on data-driven product decisions aligns perfectly with my approach. At [Company], I implemented a product analytics framework that increased feature adoption by 40% by identifying and prioritizing high-impact opportunities through A/B testing and user behavior analysis.
```

### Body Paragraph 2: Broader Value + Gap Handling

Show additional value and proactively address concerns.

**If you have gaps, address them:**
```
While my SQL experience is developing (currently completing DataCamp's SQL track), I bring strong analytical skills demonstrated through building Tableau dashboards that informed $2M in strategic decisions. I've consistently collaborated effectively with data teams and have a track record of quickly ramping on new tools.
```

**If no gaps, add more value:**
```
Beyond product management, I bring [relevant additional skill]. At [Company], this enabled me to [specific achievement]. I'm particularly drawn to [Company] because [specific reason showing research].
```

## Closing Paragraph

End with confidence and a clear call to action.

**Strong Closing Example:**
```
I'm excited about the opportunity to bring my [specific skill] experience to [Company]'s [specific initiative or product]. I'd welcome the chance to discuss how my background in [key area] could contribute to your team's goals. Thank you for considering my application.
```

**Elements of a Good Close:**
- Express genuine enthusiasm (for something specific)
- Reference a specific contribution you'd make
- Clear call to action (discuss, meet, etc.)
- Thank them

**Closing Don'ts:**
- ❌ "I look forward to hearing from you" (passive)
- ❌ "Please find my resume attached" (obvious)
- ❌ "I am available for an interview at your convenience" (desperate)

## Complete Cover Letter Template

```
[Your Name]
[Your Email] | [Your Phone] | [LinkedIn URL]
[City, State]

[Date]

[Hiring Manager Name, if known]
[Title]
[Company Name]
[Company Address]

Dear [Mr./Ms. Last Name / Hiring Manager],

[OPENING HOOK - 1-2 sentences grabbing attention with company knowledge, mutual connection, or impressive achievement]

[BRIDGE TO POSITION - 1 sentence stating the role and your interest]

[BODY 1 - 3-4 sentences connecting your strongest relevant experience to their primary requirement. Include specific metrics and results.]

[BODY 2 - 3-4 sentences adding additional value, addressing any gaps if needed, and demonstrating company research/culture fit]

[CLOSING - 2-3 sentences expressing enthusiasm, suggesting next steps, and thanking them]

Sincerely,
[Your Name]
```

## Industry-Specific Considerations

### Tech/Engineering
- Mention specific technologies
- Reference GitHub, portfolio, or technical projects
- Show you understand their tech stack

### Marketing/Creative
- Show creativity in the letter itself (within reason)
- Reference their campaigns or brand voice
- Include relevant metrics (engagement, conversion, etc.)

### Finance/Consulting
- More formal tone
- Lead with credentials/certifications
- Emphasize analytical rigor and results

### Startup vs. Enterprise
**Startup:** More casual, show scrappiness, emphasize growth mindset
**Enterprise:** More formal, emphasize process and scale experience

## Handling Common Scenarios

### When You Don't Know the Hiring Manager
```
Dear Hiring Manager,
OR
Dear [Department] Team,
OR
Dear [Company Name] Recruiting Team,
```
Avoid "To Whom It May Concern" (too impersonal)

### When You Have a Referral
Lead with it:
```
"[Name] on your [team] team suggested I reach out about the [Position] role. Having [connection to referrer], I was excited to learn about [Company]'s work in [area]."
```

### When You're Underqualified
Don't apologize. Instead, emphasize:
- Transferable skills
- Quick learning ability
- Genuine enthusiasm
- Related experience that compensates

### When You're Overqualified
Explain your motivation:
```
"After 10 years leading large teams, I'm energized by the opportunity to return to hands-on [function] work at a company where I can make direct impact on [specific area]."
```

### When Addressing Career Change
```
"While my background is in [Previous Field], I've been actively building [New Field] skills through [courses, projects, etc.]. My experience in [transferable skill] translates directly to [new role] through [specific connection]."
```

## Output Format

When generating a cover letter, provide:

```markdown
# COVER LETTER FOR [POSITION] AT [COMPANY]

## Analysis Summary
- Match Score: [From JD Analyzer]
- Key Strengths to Highlight: [List]
- Gaps to Address: [List or "None"]
- Company Research Notes: [Key facts to reference]

## Generated Cover Letter

[Full cover letter text]

---

## Alternative Openings

**Option 1 (Company Knowledge):**
[Alternative opening hook]

**Option 2 (Achievement-Led):**
[Alternative opening hook]

## Key Talking Points for Interview
- [Point 1 from the letter to expand on]
- [Point 2]
- [Point 3]
```

## Quality Checklist

Before delivering any cover letter:

1. ✅ Opens with a hook (not "I am writing to apply")
2. ✅ Mentions specific company knowledge
3. ✅ Connects experience directly to job requirements
4. ✅ Includes at least one specific metric/achievement
5. ✅ Addresses any obvious gaps (if applicable)
6. ✅ Has confident but not arrogant tone
7. ✅ Ends with clear call to action
8. ✅ Is 250-400 words (3-4 paragraphs)
9. ✅ Contains no typos or grammatical errors
10. ✅ Would make you want to interview this person

Overview

This skill generates personalized, persuasive cover letters from a user's resume and a job description. It crafts attention-grabbing openings, ties specific experience to employer needs, and closes with a clear call to action. The output follows a proven 3–4 paragraph structure and stays within 250–400 words.

How this skill works

Provide a resume (or key achievements) and the target job description. The skill analyzes the job's top requirements, selects the strongest matching achievements, and produces a tailored letter that matches company tone and addresses qualification gaps. It also offers alternative openings and key talking points for interviews.

When to use it

  • When applying to a specific job and you have the job description
  • To convert resume bullets into a narrative that shows fit
  • When you need to address gaps or a career change proactively
  • When you want a custom tone (startup, enterprise, formal, creative)
  • Before submitting applications to make cover letters concise and targeted

Best practices

  • Submit the full job description and a detailed resume or achievement list
  • Choose an opening hook aligned with company research or a referral
  • Include specific metrics and results to prove impact
  • If you have gaps, acknowledge them briefly and show how you’ll ramp up
  • Review and personalize company-specific details before sending

Example use cases

  • Apply for a product manager role by linking product metrics to the job's priorities
  • Convert technical project work into a recruiter-friendly narrative for engineering roles
  • Craft a career-change letter that highlights transferable skills and certifications
  • Create a concise, metrics-driven letter for finance or consulting applications
  • Generate multiple opening hooks to A/B test for different applications

FAQ

Can this handle different tones for startups vs enterprises?

Yes. The skill adapts tone and phrasing to startup scrappiness or enterprise formality based on your preference.

What if I don’t know the hiring manager’s name?

It provides professional salutations like “Dear Hiring Manager” or “Dear [Department] Team” and avoids overly impersonal options like “To Whom It May Concern.”