application letter
Project 2
For this assignment, you will create one document that has two items:
• A Job Application Letter
• A Résumé
You will need to research job leads to find an actual job announcement that advertises a
position for which you are qualified. Search national job sites like Monster.com,
Indeed.com, Careerbuilder.com, and USAJobs.gov.
Research the Company or Organization. You must research the company or organization
that advertised the job announcement. You can research the company in a variety of
ways. For instance, you can find the company’s Website if one is available; or you may
obtain a copy of the company's annual report; or, if you know someone who works for
that company, you can network with employees of the company
The goal here is for you to become more informed about the company in general—its
product line, its past and current successes, and its plans for future development. Ideally,
you should use some of this information to your advantage in your application letter. The
best application letters not only demonstrate how you are well qualified, but also show
how you can make specific contributions to the company. Remember that the chief aim
of an application letter is to help you get an interview. Your letter should persuade the
reader that you are the best applicant for the position.
Requirements for the Application Letter
Review the information on application letters in Chapter 9 and write a job application
letter with an effective introduction, body, and conclusion. The job-application letter,
which is the first thing the reader sees, expands upon a few of the points made in the
résumé. The typical letter has at least three parts, and your letter should have all of them:
• Introduction. The first paragraph establishes why you are writing to your reader.
State that you are looking for a particular position and explain why you would
like to work at that particular company. You should also identify the source where
you find the job opening information. Forecast the body of the letter by stating
your major qualifications for the job.
• Body. The body of the letter develops each qualification (education and
experience) with specific evidence. The goal is to show that you know what
the employer needs and that you meet the requirements. You may organize this
section around your education, around your training and experience, or around
what the job or the company requires.
• Conclusion. You should end the letter politely and include a reference to the
enclosed résumé, a request for an interview, and your phone number and e-mail address.
Format
Your letter must meet all of the formatting requirements of a good business letter. It
should use the block format. If possible, write no more than one page. The letter should
contain all of the elements covered in the chapter about letters.
1. Heading (sender’s address)
2. Date
3. Inside address (full address, including title, for the person who is addressed)
4. Salutation
5. Body text (introduction, body, conclusion)
6. Complimentary closing ("Sincerely," or "Sincerely yours,")
7. Signature
8. Typed name
9. Enclosure notation (“Encl. Résumé”)
Requirements for the Résumé
The purpose of the résumé is to describe your qualifications for work. Review the
information on résumés in the textbook carefully and then design and write a professional
résumé.
You should create either a functional or reverse chronological résumé tailored for the
specific job opening. If you have limited job experience, a gap in experience or are
changing careers, you must create a functional résumé. If you have mid-level experience
and beyond, you must create a chronological résumé.
A functional résumé should be no longer than one page, and a chronological résumé with
over 15-20 years of experience can be two pages, and both must contain all of the
following elements:
1. Heading (full name, address, phone, and email address)
2. Education (schools, majors, minors, and dates of graduation; omit high school
education unless it is a specialized high school)
3. Work Experience (employer’s name, the position you hold, and a list or
description of duties and responsibilities for each position)
4. Certifications (optional)
5. Interests and Activities (optional)
DO NOT write an objective statement or include "References Available Upon Request"
(Employers assume your objective--to get a job--and also indicate if they want
references)
Your style should be formal. You need not use complete sentences, but you should use a
concise, active style and show consistency in expression from section to section. When
making lists, be sure to use the parallel structure (They should match one another in tense and
form).
Requirements
• Failure to use a functional format when you have limited experience, a gap in
employment, or are changing careers will result in 10-point deduction
• You can use specialized descriptive 2-3 word phrases or single words in your
documents (copy/pasting an external source's sentences, sentence fragments, job
descriptions will result in the assignment turned over to the Office of Student
Conduct for an academic integrity violation) Copyedit, copyedit, and copyedit
again--read your work out loud, verbally to hear errors.
• Have a friend find errors. Make sure to include the website URL in the comment
to instructor box available via Canvas so that the instructor can view the job
announcement (Failure to include a working URL will result in a 5-point
deduction).
Submission Instructions
• Submit via Unicheck in Canvas. No assignments will be accepted over email.
• Required file title for final version: your last name-job application.
• Submit the document as a PDF.
Note: Academic Integrity
While you can find unlimited samples of job application or job description materials on
the internet DO NOT attempt to copy those from those samples. The point of this
assignment is for you to learn how to compose a letter and create a resume to persuade
your audience to give you an interview. Therefore, it is NOT acceptable to copy phrases,
fragments, sentences, paragraphs or descriptions of past work experience you found
elsewhere.
If you copy phrases, fragments, sentences, paragraphs or descriptions of past work
experience you found in online examples, you cannot get a 70 or above on this
assignment, even if you cite the sources--and if you fail to cite the sources, this
assignment will be turned over to the Office of Student Conduct for an academic integrity
violation.
- Project 2
- Requirements for the Application Letter
- Format
- Requirements for the Résumé
- Requirements
- Submission Instructions
- Note: Academic Integrity