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I let an expert tear my horrible cover letter to shreds - here are the mistakes I won't make again

Jun 24, 2016, 19:10 IST

Andrew Burton/Getty Images

I hate cover letters. 

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They're long. They're boring. Unlike résumés, you can't just blast them out to multiple companies with minimal editing. I always feel like mine sound super fake, even when I am genuinely excited about the job. 

But when I was applying for jobs in my senior year of college, I did my best to shake my bad attitude by researching what makes a bomb cover letter. 

A lot of the advice I got - on the internet and from people I know - was dry, vague, and rather contradictory: Make it half a page, tops; tell a story; don't get fancy; staying formal is your best bet; contractions are unprofessional; keep it short and sweet!

As my various application deadlines loomed, I actually dug up an old cover letter that I'd submitted to an internship junior year. I figured that I'd be lazy and plug in some new names and details (yeah, I now know that's a bad idea) or at least use the bare-bone structure to write some new cover letters. 

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But ... that's not what happened. My old cover letter was completely unsalvageable. Inexcusable. A 3-page self-focused monstrosity. And I'd sent it out for other humans to read. 

So I figured I'd ask an expert to go over my terrible letter and provide concrete reasons on why it's a trainwreck.

Amy Adler, a certified master résumé writer, management coach, and CEO of Five Strengths, went through paragraph by paragraph and gave me some feedback. 

Cover Letter

Adler also provided the following helpful tips on how I could've improved this particular cover letter (other than burning it and starting over):  

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