Marketing You, Pt. 4: 

Resumes & Cover Letters

Marketing You, Pt. 4 walks you through refining your marketing tools for optimized self-representation and communication with potential employers

You will analyze: 

You will evaluate:

You will synthesize your Skillsets, Experience, and Motivations into:

📋 At This Point, You Should Have:

You can do this part without doing the others, but your job search is much less likely to land you your Dream Job. You'll still be doing more than 90% of applicants do!

☑ A chosen job title, thoroughly researched (plus two backups). 

☑ A list of five Tier 2 companies you're interested in applying to, also thoroughly researched.

☑ Sent your initial 5 expert emails, with a schedule for closing the loop.

Resumes matter, but are silly without a strategy

Most people are relying on their resumes, sent indiscriminately to dozens of jobs, to get a job. That's like throwing them into a black hole and expecting results. I'd like to think you're smarter than that, you've learned about strategic thinking, you know that applying just a bit of extra thought and effort is more than 90% of people do... and that if you do that you'll be playing an entirely different game on an entirely higher level than that 90%. 

Your strategy should be to talk to experts, build a relationship, then work your way up to a company VIP if at all possible, before you send out a resume at all. This strategy works because relationships will always count more than resumes. Always. If you can walk in the door known vs. unknown, everything changes.

Best-Case Scenario (Multi-Touch Strategy)

Your resume and cover letter are mostly a formality as you've been invited to apply by a VIP at a company, or know they already have an awareness of you through your Natural Networking.

Worst-Case Scenario

Your resume and cover letter dominate the competition, because you targeted them to the job and company specifically.

Because the Multi-Touch Strategy might not always be possible with every job, it's important to note that most people don't do the work when applying for jobs of getting targeted and specific - so you should do that work. 

Everyone Else

Sends a generic resume and application and has their materials doomed to the Resume Black Hole.


Good Job Materials: The Icing on the Cake / Your Safety Net

So even if materials are hopefully just icing on the cake, let's go ahead and prepare them in case we need them now. In this general review/rewrite of your basic materials, I want to be sure you know we can't do targeting... but you should plan to redo them each time based on some research when you apply for jobs to ensure they're targeted and better than everyone else's.

JOB PROFILES IN ACTION

"I don’t even start my [business] copy until I have done some serious market profile research. I interview my potential clients and get their language, then I place the copy and it matches what potential customers want. Makes complete sense to do the same for my resume. Duh!" - Antonio 

This is actually really hard to do. Being good at it though means everything you write and say will get better, less fluffy, more authentic - and thus more powerful in sending a clear message and in connecting to others through writing.

Here an example from a real resume: "A creative and strategic thinker with excellent written and verbal communication skills. In plain English, all this means is "I'm smart and well-rounded." Everyone says this about themselves, even if they're not. 👎 Throw it out.  

Putting Together a Narrative-Based Resume

Most resumes are simply a list of facts: "I went to school at X, then did Y and Z." I've reviewed hundreds of resumes and it holds true in nearly all situations. Facts are not enough. An effective resume needs a narrative: an underlying thread that ties all your facts together into a crystal clear "snapshot." 

And most critically, this "snapshot" should be exactly what your hiring manager is looking for. Your hiring manager's #1 question is: Who are you, and what can you do for me? Yet nobody thinks about resumes like this! If the underlying message of your resume is unclear, a hiring manager will give it 10 seconds, think "I don't get it" and move on. Don't leave it up to them to decipher your resume. Be clear. Decide in advance the top 1-3 things you want them to take away. 

A truly excellent resume is one which can be reduced to a single message: "I am the ___ who can help you ___."

There are 3 steps to creating a narrative-based resume. Doing them well will take you about 3 hours for your first drafts: 

Step 1: Doing the Target Research then Choosing Your Narrative

Before you apply to a job you should know...

Get into their heads. What are the 1-3 things that would get your hiring manager to notice, remember, and call you over the 300 hundred other resumes in their inbox? "I am the ____ that can help you ____."

Step 2: Trim the Fat

Hiring managers aren't dummies — they can spot the fluff a mile away. Look at your resume, one line at a time, and ask yourself: What am I really trying to say here, in plain English? Then ask yourself: 

If so, keep it in. Otherwise, throw it out. Be relentless. Every single word must earn its place onto the page. 

Step 3: Write Bullets that Sell

Most people write their resumes using language like this: "Assisted Account Executives in creating advertising materials according to established processes." Uggggghhhhhh, especially that last phrase 'according to established procedures'. Oh, you mean you did your job as asked?? Gross fluff. 👎Should be cut. 

In fact, let's rewrite this in an engaging way that really explains what this person did that was different from what others did, that has meaningful details like results, and that makes them seem more credible....

"Crafted media kits with interactive audio and video elements that led to over $100,000 in new advertising from industry leaders such as Acme Corp."

Now that's a hireable person.

Preparing a Dazzling Cover Letter

The average cover letter is truly terrible: cliché, boring, and puffed up - even for great candidates. That's because most people treat their cover letter as an afterthought to their resume — or worse, just their resume in paragraph form. It isn't. Instead, think of your cover letter as the written response to the question, "Why should we interview you for this job?" In other words, if your resume answers the WHAT, your cover letter answers the WHY. 

Again, we can tackle crafting your cover letter in 3 steps , and doing this well will take you about 3 hours for your first draft:

Step 1: Choose 1-3 Selling Points

"Why should we interview you?" This isn't an easy question to answer. For example, everyone thinks that I should want to work with them just because they'll work for free. But I don't care about free — I want to work with those who are driven, good, proven, and easy to work with.

That's why all the prep work you've been doing is so important. So fire up your notes from the earlier modules and write down ALL the reasons why your target company should hire you. Then pick the 1-3 best.

Tips

🢡 Having a great track record is always a top selling point. In fact, all 3 of your selling points can be about results if they're impressive enough. 

🢡 Three is great, but I'd prefer you choose one really great selling point over three lukewarm ones.

🢡 If you're relatively inexperienced, focus on intangibles like these: 

Step 2: Tell a (Brief) Story for Each Point

The best cover letters tell stories. Why? They capture our attention. We can't resist reading them. They show, rather than tell. Nobody else writes them! Most importantly, stories show that you're a real person. In a sea of boring, faceless applicants, and AI generated content, this is how you stand out. In your cover letter, I want you to tell a story that demonstrates each of the selling points you chose. Stories are what separates the actual doers from everyone else. Everyone says "I get things done." "I'm a strategic thinker." "I'm analytical." But can you prove it with a unique and compelling example?

Story!!! 

"For example, I've read 20 books on graphic design, listen to Accidental Creative daily, and had coffee with 5 artists and designers last week, one of whom taught me about X."

"For example, I use over 8 social media platforms regularly, including YouTube, Twitter and my own professional blog which gets over 5,000 visitors per day."

No Story

"I'm passionate about design."

"I’m well-versed in social media."

Tips

🢡 If you can't come up with a good story for one of your selling points, then it's probably not that great to begin with. Go back and pick a selling point that you can show, not tell. A good way to "check" for stories is to add "For example..." after each point.

🢡 We all have great stories, but we easily forget them. From now on, every time you think of a new work-related story, add it to a "Story Toolbox." (This can be a Google Doc or anything that works for you.) 

🢡 For some of us, especially women, we have trouble articulating our stories because it feels gross and braggy - even though it isn't. How do you sell yourself without coming across as arrogant or egotistical? Easily. 

Think about this: 

I've reviewed thousands of resumes, and I've never looked at one thought, "This person brags too much." It's ALWAYS the other way around. This is a job application! The hiring manager wants someone to come along and impress them, so why not make their lives a little easier? Stop worrying about over-selling. Chances are you're not doing it enough.

🢡 If you're REALLY struggling with these, ask your friends and past bosses etc. to help you generate some starter stories. 

🢡Again, all we're doing is thinking about what our hiring manager wants, then giving it to them — all while staying 100% honest and authentic.

Step 3: Write Your Cover Letter


Coming up in Part 5, you will: 

🢡 Develop your interview communication skills and polish your presentation

You will...

🢡 Develop an interview practice strategy

🢡 Practice delivering quality answers to common interview questions

🢡 Draw on all of your research and pre-planning throughout this project, to optimize your chances of securing a job offer

To the home stretch! 

Your Marketing Materials Summary

After this, you'll have a huge advantage over your competitors. Not because of better skills, but because of better marketing. You'll still need to do some tweaks for each application, but now you have your baseline materials. And of course they'll get better with each revision. And remember, while you do need these materials, you're not relying on them. Your strategy runs far deeper than resumes and cover letters (if you did the other steps).

Acknowledgements

This post quotes directly and sources liberally (with approval of course) from Ramit Sethi's original Find Your Dream Job online course which he has since updated (Module 5 specifically). Ramit has graciously allowed us to source up to 1/3 of his paid materials for our students, in exchange for this mention and for helping you to succeed. His materials have been chosen for sourcing because he uses a process of testing, delivers his material using real talk, and bases his work on either testing or proven science (despite not having a PhD himself he is Stanford educated and he's mentored by many brilliant and University affiliated individuals whose work he translates into his courses).