The Pitfalls Of Using Free Resume Cover Letters

Friday, August 3, 2007

The Pitfalls Of Using Free Resume Cover Letters by Mario Churchill

You've seen them before - free resume cover letters that promise
to make your job a lot easier and faster. They're readily
available, they offer you what you need and they don't cost a
dime, so what's the harm?

The trouble with free resume cover letters Well, for starters,
free resume cover letters do not maintain the same quality as
other resume cover letters. If you're a job hunter who's been in
the job market for too long, you know the kind of pressure you
face everyday. Not only are the number of potential employers
shrinking, the number of potential rivals for a job position
also increases. As more and more people discover the very same
job you're applying for, your chances of getting the job you
want gets smaller and smaller.

That only makes using a resume cover letter extremely important.
When you're too stressed out and worried about the competition,
there is a possibility that you'll slip and produce a less than
perfect resume cover letter, prime feed for the trash can or the
paper shredding machine. That is not the kind of scenario you
want. So why can't you not use free resume cover letters?

They're not all that bad, these free resume cover letters.
Problem is, they're also not that good. They will do, but only
for jobs that you're really not interested in or for those who
have no other applicant other than you. Free cover letter
samples are often not as excellently written and not as good as
professionally prepared cover letter samples. In a job market
where you'll need all the help you could get, free resume cover
letters are simply not good news at all.

Using free resume cover letters Resume cover letters will say a
great deal about you - they will inform your potential employer
about your professional capabilities and give them a glimpse of
what your personality is like.

Now let's take a look at how you'll use a free resume cover
letter and see why it has 'cheap' written all over it. When you
find a free resume cover letter, you'll usually find one that is
written with a general feel of what a resume cover letter should
read like. You get the usual greetings, introductions, body of
the letter and your closing statements.

Since this cover letter was published to help everyone from a
nanny to a chief financial officer, you'll have to change
several elements in order to come up with a resume cover letter
that seems tailored for your own particular qualifications. Now
all you have to do is to mail it and hope for the best.

Problem is, once the hiring manager reads this so-called cover
letter of yours, what will he see? A cover letter that looks so
familiar he probably has read it before. In fact, he must have,
considering that it must have been written using a free resume
cover letter that has been available on the internet for the
past five years.

Worse, it's probably been seen and used by thousands of other
job hunters before you, some of which may have sent their
applications using the very same free resume cover letter that
you yourself used! Imagine how badly that will reflect on you.

Avoid this type of pitfall that is so common among job hunters
that it should have been outlawed by now. It's hard enough to
compete in a cutthroat job market. Actually ruining your chances
with a badly written free resume cover letter is not just a
mistake, it's a crime.

About the author:
Mario Churchill is a freelance author and has written over 200
articles on various subjects.

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