Have you ever wondered if the fax machine jammed
with your resume inside? Are you sure the hiring manager would give you a call
if only he or she knew you better? If questions like these keep you up at night,
then the follow-up letter can be the cure.
Get employers to give your resume a second look
with these tips:
1. Name your reader. If you didn't address
your initial cover letter to an individual, this is a second chance to get a
name. "Many times you don't even know who you're sending it to, so who are you
following up with?" says Sara Nolfo, an executive recruiter for New York-based
Lynne Palmer Executive Recruitment. Do some digging. Call the company and ask
the receptionist for the hiring manager's name.
2. Confirm or deny. In a follow-up letter,
you want to determine if the company got your resume, and if there is any interest,
says Mark Mehler, co-author of Career Xroads, a directory to Internet
job sites. Even if you have the fax confirmation sheet in your hand, a follow-up
letter can buy your resume more time with the recruiter. And that's important.
3. Get your name noticed again.Recruiters sift through stacks of resumes, and making your name jump
out at them works to your advantage. If you're responding to two ads for the
same company, the follow-up letter can distinguish yourself anew. Better yet,
network within the company until you find a contact who will deliver your new
letter and resume by hand. That way, Mehler says, recruiters "get a little more
feedback, a little more impression, which boosts your points before you get
through the door."
4. Consider other options. If it's been weeks
since you sent your resume and your phone isn't ringing, don't despair. "It
doesn't mean they don't have your resume and they're never going to call you,"
Nolfo says. "They may even call you for something else, now that they have your
resume." If the original position has been filled, use the follow-up letter
to re-submit your resume for any other positions for which you're qualified.
5. Be selective. If you have mass-mailed
your resume, you probably have a genuine interest in only a few of them. "Many
times people don't know if they want to work for an employer," says John Bakos,
president of the Bakos Group, a career management firm in Massachusetts. Choose
your battles carefully, and save yourself some time. Follow up only with the
employers you know you'd like to work for.
6. Give an update. If your skills package
has changed since you first submitted your resume, let the hiring manager know.
"You can update your resume if you've taken new classes or gained new skills,"
Mehler says. Positions can take months to fill, and you can use the time to
improve your candidacy.
7. Wait it out. Sometimes no news is good
news. "The timetable of the recruiter and the timetable of the job seeker are
never the same," Mehler says. You may need to be patient.
8. Don't overdo it. "You can continue to
resubmit your resume to a company, but give it a little time in between," Nolfo
says. Recruiters aren't harried by people who follow up. But you should be savvy
about keeping in touch with them: There's a thin line between persistence and
pestering.
9. Take note. Keep a detailed log of where
and when you send your resume. If you don't receive a response in a month or
two, a follow-up letter to the hiring manager may be in order. Try responding
to another ad or sending a new resume and cover letter, they may not have your
resume anymore or they may have filed it.
10. Check your work. Before sending your
letter, get another person to look at it. After all, "the only thing worse than
not sending a follow-up letter is sending one with a typo," Nolfo says.