You found the listing. It looks like a genuine fit — the role, the company, the scope. You have your resume. Now you need a cover letter, and you need it to actually say something relevant rather than a recycled version of the same three paragraphs you've been copying for the past six months.
The Cover Letter Generator takes your resume and the job description as inputs and returns a letter that addresses the specific requirements of the role — not a template with your name swapped in.
The Situation
You've been browsing job boards and something caught your eye. The title matches where you want to go. The requirements list is long, but you check most of the boxes. You copy the job description text. You already have your resume saved.
The problem with most cover letters isn't effort — it's mismatch. A letter written about yourself, without careful reference to the specific language and priorities of the posting, reads as generic even when it's sincere. Hiring managers are comparing your letter against the requirements they wrote. The closer the alignment, the better the signal.
Doing this well manually means reading the JD carefully, identifying the three or four things that matter most to this employer, and then selecting the best evidence from your own background that maps to each of those things. That's a 30–45 minute task done properly. Most people don't do it properly because they're applying to multiple roles simultaneously.
The Workflow: Cover Letter Generator
Upload two files: your resume (PDF or DOCX) and the job description (paste as TXT or upload the PDF). The agent reads both.
The agent extracts the key requirements from the JD — the stated qualifications, the implied priorities in how responsibilities are listed, and the language the employer uses to describe success in the role. It then cross-references your resume to identify the experiences and skills from your background that best match those requirements.
The output is a professionally structured cover letter that leads with the most relevant alignment, supports it with specific evidence from your background, and closes with appropriate tone. It uses the employer's language where it matters — because mirroring the vocabulary of the posting is one of the signals that a careful reader picks up.
What You Get
A single cover letter in DOCX and PDF formats. It's written for this role, not for generic application purposes.
Read it through. You'll likely want to adjust a sentence or two — add a specific detail the agent couldn't know, soften a phrase that doesn't sound like you. That editing pass takes five minutes. The 45-minute drafting pass is done.
Running It Per Application
The workflow is designed to be run once per application. Upload your resume and a different JD each time. Each run takes about 2 minutes. If you're applying to ten roles, you can run ten cover letters in the time it would normally take you to write one carefully.
This scales the approach that most candidates know they should take but don't have time for: treating each application as a separate targeting problem rather than a copy-paste operation.
Inputs and Outputs
Inputs: Your resume (PDF or DOCX) + the job description (TXT paste or PDF upload).
Output: A tailored cover letter in DOCX and PDF formats.
Estimated time: About 2 minutes end to end.
