Install
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/cover-letterWrite a specific, non-generic cover letter that connects your evidence to the role. Use when asked to write a cover letter, an application letter, or a note to accompany a resume. Produces a tight 3–4 paragraph letter — a real hook, two evidence paragraphs mapping your proof to the job's needs, and a confident close — tailored to the company, ready to export as a designed PDF.
openclaw skills install @mohitagw15856/cover-letterMost cover letters are throat-clearing the reader skips. A good one does one job: connect your specific evidence to this company's specific need, in a voice that sounds like a person. This skill writes a tight, tailored letter — no "I am writing to apply for…", no restating the resume — that earns the read.
Ask for these only if they aren't already provided:
A 3–4 paragraph letter (≈250–350 words):
[Name] · [email] · [phone] · [date] Dear [hiring manager name, or "Hiring Team" if unknown],
Hook (1 short para) — open with a specific reason you're writing to them — a genuine connection to their product/mission/moment — and the role you want. No "I am writing to apply."
Evidence (1–2 paras) — the heart: take the role's top 2–3 needs and show, with a concrete result each, that you've done it. Map your proof to their problem; don't recap the resume — interpret it.
Close (1 short para) — what you'd bring, an honest note of enthusiasm, and a forward-looking line ("I'd love to talk about…"). Confident, not desperate.
Sincerely, [Name]
Voice note (for the user): keep it human — contractions, active voice, no thesaurus words. Read it aloud; if it sounds like a robot, cut.
Modern cover-letter practice — specific hook, evidence-to-need mapping, human voice.