Most cover letters open with “I am writing to apply for the position of…” and the hiring manager has already stopped reading. A cover letter earns its place by saying something your resume cannot: why this role, why this company, and what you would do in it. This guide shows the structure that works and how to get a matching PDF out fast.
The short version: fill in a few fields about the role and what you bring, and download a formatted letter. The free cover letter generator does it on your device, with no sign-up.
What the letter is for
Your resume lists what you have done. The cover letter argues why it matters here. It is the one place you get to connect your record to this specific job in plain language, and to show you understand what the company actually needs.
That framing kills the generic letter. A hiring manager can spot a template that has been copied across fifty applications, and it reads as low effort. A letter that names the role, references something real about the company, and ties your experience to their problem reads as someone who wants this job.
The three-part structure
A strong cover letter has a simple shape:
- Open with the point. Name the role and lead with your single best reason to be considered. Skip the windup. “I have spent four years cutting churn for subscription products, which is the problem your job ad describes” beats any “I am writing to apply” opening.
- Prove it with two or three examples. This is the body, one or two short paragraphs. Pick the experiences that map most directly to the role and attach a result to each. Do not restate your whole resume; choose the two or three things that matter most for this job and make them concrete.
- Close with a clear next step. A short, confident sign-off that invites a conversation. Thank them, restate your interest in a line, and say you would welcome the chance to talk.
Three to four short paragraphs, one page. That is the whole thing.
Match the letter to the advert
Read the job ad and pull out the language it uses — the problems it names, the skills it asks for, the words it repeats. Echo a couple of those phrases honestly where they describe you. This does two things: it signals to the human reader that you read the ad properly, and it lines your letter up with the role’s own vocabulary.
Tailoring does not mean flattery. It means showing you understood what they are hiring for and explaining, specifically, why you fit it.
How to write it
Step 1: Add the basics
Open the cover letter generator and enter your name, the company and role, and the hiring manager’s name if you have it. A named greeting beats “To whom it may concern” whenever you can find the name.
Step 2: Say what you bring
Add a few points about your relevant experience and why you want the role. The letter is laid out around them, so you focus on the substance rather than the formatting.
Step 3: Download and send
Export a clean PDF to attach with your application. No watermark, no account, and nothing uploaded.
Mistakes to avoid
- Restating your resume. The letter should add context and argument, not repeat the bullet list. If a sentence just paraphrases your resume, cut it.
- The generic opener. “I am writing to apply” wastes your strongest line. Lead with the reason you fit instead.
- No company-specific detail. A letter that could be sent to any employer reads as if it was. One genuine, specific reference to the role or company changes that.
- Going long. Past one page, a hiring manager skims or skips. Tight and specific wins.
Your resume and cover letter should tell one consistent story. Build the resume in the resume builder first, then run it through the ATS checker to confirm it matches the job before you send the pair.