Resume help - a very quick question!

VBboy

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 2000
5,793
0
0
Hi guys.

When E-mailing a resume to a company, how do you "greet" the person who will be reading it, on the first line of the message? The contact name is unknown, only the E-mail address and company info is given. Can I say:

Hello
-or-
To Whom It May Concern
-or-
Dear hirer (?!)

Or something else?
Please be serious. None of that "Yo, yo, wassup!" stuff :)
 

ggavinmoss

Diamond Member
Apr 20, 2001
4,798
1
0
Well, I'm kinda kidding.

Something like "Dear <company x> Human Resources Department," would work. "To Whom It May Concern:" sounds pretty dry and bleh.

-geoff

 

civad

Golden Member
May 30, 2001
1,397
0
0
"Dear Recruiter"

Its a pretty generic term, but then it can mean anybody: Male/Female; CEO/ Manager; even the front desk secretary.

Trust me, it works!

However, if the name/title of the contact person is mentioned in the job posting, Always address as :

Dear Mr. XXX/ Ms. XXX.

A caveat: if the job posting says:
Contact: J. Smith, HR manager.....

How do we know if the person is a male or female? In this case, revert to the "Dear Recruiter" stragety.

HTH!

GL@

--Civ

 

VBboy

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 2000
5,793
0
0
Dear Recruiter -

Doesn't that work better for a third-party recruiting company?
 

edro

Lifer
Apr 5, 2002
24,326
68
91
Call the company and ask who the person is in charge of new hires. Then, put their name.

That way it looks specific, and you took the time out to check out their name.
 

bootymac

Diamond Member
Aug 20, 2001
9,597
0
76
SUP DAWG?!?!?!?!? HOW MY NUMBER ONE HOMMIE G DOING!? HOOK A BROTHA UP WITH SOME BLING BLING!
 

Gooberlx2

Lifer
May 4, 2001
15,381
6
91
My sister does this stuff for a living and still recommends "To Whom it may concern". All of my letters of recommendation also say that.

Also, you mean to put this on your cover letter right and not your resume?
 

civad

Golden Member
May 30, 2001
1,397
0
0
Call the company and ask who the person is in charge of new hires. Then, put their name.
Doesn't that work better for a third-party recruiting company?

Sample job posting on one of the n job-sites on the Internet:

Established international construction company in xxxx offers excellent opportunity for a person with a minimum of 4 years experience in construction. The ideal candidate will have </begin blah>........</end blah>

Send resume to abc@xyz.com

--->Job looks good, and looks like I might be interested, but... who do I call? How do I find out about the company?

Edit: Not that I want to impose that "Dear Recruiter" is the best way...just that it worked for me.
 

davee

Banned
Aug 20, 2002
273
0
0
Originally posted by: StattlichPassat
You guys are too much... I don't know the correct way of saying it these days, but I would just say "Greetings,"
christmas is over though;)
 

VBboy

Diamond Member
Nov 12, 2000
5,793
0
0
Originally posted by: Gooberlx2
My sister does this stuff for a living and still recommends "To Whom it may concern". All of my letters of recommendation also say that.

Also, you mean to put this on your cover letter right and not your resume?

No, in my E-mail. But I guess on the cover letter too. Definitely not on the resume. Especially not in the "References" section :)
 

Supermercado

Diamond Member
Jan 18, 2002
5,893
0
76
Originally posted by: edro13
Call the company and ask who the person is in charge of new hires. Then, put their name.

That way it looks specific, and you took the time out to check out their name.
He's got the right idea. This is what my technical writing teacher last semester told us to do.

 

davee

Banned
Aug 20, 2002
273
0
0
Originally posted by: SuperCommando
Originally posted by: edro13
Call the company and ask who the person is in charge of new hires. Then, put their name.

That way it looks specific, and you took the time out to check out their name.
He's got the right idea. This is what my technical writing teacher last semester told us to do.

they may think its pushy tryin to jump the queue
 

ajayjuneja

Golden Member
Dec 31, 2001
1,260
0
76
Originally posted by: davee
Originally posted by: SuperCommando
Originally posted by: edro13
Call the company and ask who the person is in charge of new hires. Then, put their name.

That way it looks specific, and you took the time out to check out their name.
He's got the right idea. This is what my technical writing teacher last semester told us to do.

they may think its pushy tryin to jump the queue

and if you don't jump the queue, you will never get a job!