Twenty-Nine Common Mistakes - Cover Letter
- Addressing letters, "Dear Sir:" or "Dear Sirs:" As you know, many
readers today are women. If gender is unclear, the salutation should be something like
"Dear Hiring Manager," or "Dear Human Resources Manager."
- Addressing letters, "To whom it may concern." Find out who will receive the
correspondence, and address it personally. We received a letter addressed to "Dear
Whomever," to which one consultant replied, "I'll answer to anything but
this!"
- Enclosing a photo. Skip the photo unless you're a model or an aspiring actor.
- Handwriting or typing over an old resume or letterhead. If you've moved, start over.
Changes on old documents aren't acceptable.
- No signature. Even if you type your name at the end of correspondence, you should sign
the page in your own handwriting to give it a personal touch.
- Spelling errors. One applicant said he was well suited for "writing and editing
chores... Contact (sic) me at the address (sic) below." Would you give him your
editing work? Another writer said she would enjoy "hearing form (sic) us." Word
processing spell checkers make mistakes; so proof everything.
- Not checking grammar. One person wrote, "It sounds exciting and give me (sic) the
opportunity to use my skills." Check your letters for correct sentence structure.
Have friends review them too.
- Handwriting letters. Brief 30-word thank you notes can be handwritten, if legible. All
other correspondence should be typewritten or word processed, even if you have to borrow a
word processor or pay a secretarial service. Handwritten letters don't say "business.
- Using a Post-It Brand Note as a letter. Post-It Brand Notes aren't letters. Using one
says, "This isn't important. I was too busy to write a real letter."
- Using the word "I" too much. Some letters are filled with 20 or 30 Is. Make
sure yours aren't. Advertising is about "you." Emphasize "you" rather
than "I."
- Faxing letters unexpectedly.
- Forgetting to include your phone number. One woman wrote, "Please call me at
home," but didn't include a phone number. That looked bad.
- Cluttered desktop publishing. With the advent of PCs, some job seekers feel the urge to
"be creative" using various type sizes and fonts. Avoid this in business
correspondence. Except in rare cases, business letters should look conservative. If you
want to be creative, do so in your choice of words. Save Microsoft Publisher and Corel
Draw for your Christmas cards.
- Using a post office box as an address. Except in rare cases, such as conducting a
confidential job search, use a street address. Post office boxes seem
"transient."
- Oddball phrasing, such as "an opportunity to expand my strengths and delete my
weaknesses... " Or, "You may feel that I'm a tad overqualified." Or,
"Enclosed herewith please find my resume." Do you talk that way? You should
write the way you talk. Avoid bad phrasing by having others critique your letters.
- Typos, like "thankyou for your assistance."
- Mailing form letters. Some letters contain "fill in the blanks." Generic forms
don't work well.
- Not saying enough. One want ad letter read, "Please accept my enclosed resume for
the position of Executive Director. Thank you." That's too short. A letter is an
opportunity to sell. So say something about yourself.
- Ending with "Thank you for your consideration." EVERYONE ends their letters
this way, so please don't. Try something different, like "I'm excited about talking
further," or "I know I could do a good job for you." The same goes for
"Sincerely," and "Sincerely yours." EVERYONE uses them. Find something
different like "Good wishes," "With best regards," or "With great
enthusiasm."
- WRITING IN ALL CAPS. IT'S HARD TO READ. DON'T DO IT.
- Abbreviating Cir., Ave., Dec., and all other words. Take time to spell words out. It
looks so much better.
- Forgetting to enclose your resume. If you say you're enclosing one, then do.
- Justifying right margins. When you "justify right," you create large gaps
between words inside your sentences.
- Forgetting the date and/or salutation.
- Using dot matrix printers. Most are hard to read and they make you look like an
engineer. Whenever possible, use a laser printer, even if you have to borrow one.
- Talking nonsense. "I work in instilling proper conduits for mainstream educational
connections while also encouraging individual creative forms." What? Run that one by
me again.
- Forgetting to put the letter in the envelope. (I received an empty FedEx package
yesterday.)
- The 300-word paragraph. The worst mistake in marketing is writing too long. Limit
sentences to seven or eight words, and limit paragraphs to four or five lines. In letter
writing, short is usually better. I try to limit my own letters to one page, seldom two. I
believe if I can't say it well in one page, I probably can't say it well at all.
- Even a regular size font is hard to read if he has forgotten his glasses that day, and
so small-font letters are immediately dismissed.