I’ve Read 500 Cover Letters for Entry-Level Media Jobs
Here are 12 tips your career counselor hasn’t told you
I saw this posting on SLATE and I think my students will find this article helpful in getting their entry level jobs. Ms. Goldstein, nails it. Enjoy.
The importance of a good cover letter. Photo by Thinkstock
Over the last five years, I’ve read something like 500 applications
for entry-level media jobs. Over time, I’ve spotted many talented
people, including a number of recent college graduates who are now
valued Slate employees. Slate
is a small company, so when it’s time to make a hire, a list of three
great HR-approved candidates does not magically appear on my desk. I
write the ads (like this one)
and read all of the responses myself—and after scaling mountains of
cover letters I’ve developed some opinions I can no longer hold back.
The most important one is this: Many young people seem to have no
idea how to apply for a job. What I see time after time from young media
hopefuls are not the classic no-nos, like misspellings and typos, but
what appears to be a fundamental lack of understanding of how to sell
oneself to a prospective employer. While I certainly don’t speak for all
media folk or even all of the editors at Slate,
allow me to offer some guidance to current college students and recent
grads. Some of my advice may sound familiar, but based on the
applications I’m seeing, there are plenty of green job-seekers out there
who could use these pointers.
Focus on the cover letter. It is not uncommon for me
to get 100 applications for one spot, so I’m constantly looking for
reasons not to advance a candidate to the interview round. Writing a
good cover letter is your best shot at getting noticed. If I hate a
cover letter, I won’t even look at the résumé.
Keep it short. I started putting word limits on
cover letters because I couldn’t stand, nor did I have the time to read,
the epically long letters I’d receive. I’m going to give your letter
maybe 30 seconds of my time. If you are interested in a job in
journalism, you should be able to tell me about yourself and why I
should hire you in less than 200 words. I’ve never hired someone with a
longwinded cover letter. Same goes for résumés. No one with fewer than
four years of full time work experience needs more than a page. Your
summer lifeguarding job does not need five bullet points.
Avoid awkward phrasing and attempts to be overly formal.
Introductions like “With this statement, I declare my interest in the
position you have advertised on your website” are clumsy and should be
avoided. Start with a strong but simple opener, like “I'm excited to be
writing to you to apply for the blogging position at Slate.” Conversational is much better than stilted.
You are your best advocate. It’s not uncommon for me
to get a cover letter that opens with, “I am sure you are getting many
qualified applicants for this job, many of whom are more qualified than
I.” If you don’t believe you are the best candidate, why should I? This
letter is your chance to sell yourself. Don’t plant the seed in my mind
that you aren’t the best candidate for the job. You don’t want to be
overly cocky, but I’ll take confident over meek any day.
Show me that you read my site. It’s common for cover letter writers to say, “I love Slate,”
but that doesn’t stand out to me. Be more specific. Who are your
favorite writers? What are some recent articles you enjoyed? Detailed
flattery will get you further, because it shows you’ve done your
homework. Ninety percent of the cover letters I read for our news blog,
the Slatest, mention nothing specific about that particular blog. Here’s
what one applicant for a recent position wrote (spoiler: I hired him):
“I'm particularly drawn to a dynamic news outlet like the Slatest. I
appreciate its blend of politics and current affairs, as well as its
ability to consistently sniff out the most compelling news pieces and
narratives. I dig its sense of humor, too—I can't resist a news blog
that picks up on the latest North Korean, pigeon–eating propaganda
pieces.”
Explain how selecting you will benefit me.
This is where candidates often get it totally backward. I frequently
read lines like: “I am applying for this paid internship because I think
working at Slate would be highly beneficial
for me, and would do a lot to help my future job prospects for a career
in media for after I graduate from college.” I know how working at Slate
would strengthen your résumé. But I am looking to you, candidate X, to
solve a problem for me. My problem is that I need good interns. Explain
to me how choosing you will solve my problem. Here’s how one candidate
convinced me that his skills were pertinent to the role I was hiring
for: “From my editorial experience as managing editor of 34th Street Magazine here at Penn, to my experience in news and culture blogging at LAist.com last summer, I've picked up the tools I need to perform as a Slatest intern with excellence.”
I’m not interested in anything you did before college. Leave anecdotes like this out: “I
am a born storyteller, and I’ve loved writing ever since I won an award
for playwriting in the third grade for my series of puppet fairytales.”
If you are early in your college career, then hopefully you still have
relevant experiences and interests to write about. If you don’t, know
that you’ll be competing with upperclassmen, college grads, and graduate
students who do.
I’m not interested in your life journeys. This includes your experiences studying abroad, even if
you had an amazing time. I get too many letters with paragraphs like:
“I’ve wondered to myself, how can I translate my natural talent for the
written word into a life path that is interesting and meaningful? I
asked myself this question many times during my study abroad in Morocco.
I loved working with the Moroccan farmers in helping feed their
families, but I also longed for a way to feed my own passions for books,
literature, and writing. As I enter my senior year, I think more and
more that my true calling could be to be a journalist.” Save these
musings for late night dorm room chats with your best friend.
When I read “senior thesis” my eyes glaze over.
Despite the fact your academic advisers have convinced you these are
really important, most people don’t care about them in the real world.
Be wary of dwelling on what your topic is and PLEASE do not attach a
chapter with your application. Writing a senior thesis has nothing to do
with journalism. I’ll never open it, and I’ll resent you for sending
it.
I don’t really care what classes you’ve taken, either.
I’m much more interested in what you’ve done that relates to the skills
needed for the position than I am in what you’ve studied. An
interesting Tumblr account, a vibrant Twitter presence, or a personal
blog on a topic you are passionate about is 10 times more compelling to
me than your course load.
Your college and GPA aren’t as important as you think. This
may be the biggest blow to you, grasshopper. In general, I don’t care
about your GPA or whether you went to an Ivy League school, so
definitely don’t expect this alone to swing open any doors for you. Of
all the entry-level people I’ve hired, the one that went on to have the
most successful career in media never finished college. If you are still
in college, you should mention where you go and what you study. But the
further out of college you are, the less I want to hear about where you
went or how you did there.
Follow the application instructions to a T. I often
give really specific instructions in the job posting, listing a word
limit on cover letters, requesting exactly two writing samples, and
noting a firm deadline for when applications are due. This is my first
test in how good you are at taking direction. If you send four writing
samples rather than two, that doesn’t make me think you are
overqualified, it makes me think you can’t edit yourself or aren’t good
at doing what is asked of you. Small mistakes like this help me figure
out whom to eliminate, so tread carefully.
If you follow these instructions, you should have a good shot at
making it to the top of the pile. It might not be long before you’re on
the other side of the desk, reading cover letters yourself.
Good luck.
Good luck.
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