Rewritten
I'm excited to apply for the Product Manager role at [Company], particularly given your recent launch of the carbon tracking app for small businesses — a product that tackles a problem I've long been interested in: making sustainability data accessible to organizations without dedicated ESG teams. My background in user research and cross-functional collaboration would let me hit the ground running on a product like this, where understanding a non-technical small-business user's needs is just as important as the underlying data accuracy.
About this tool
A cover letter that could be sent to any company is easy for hiring managers to spot and easy for them to ignore. This tool takes a generic letter you've already written along with a few specifics about the company you're applying to — its mission, a recent product launch, something distinctive about its culture — and weaves those details in naturally so the letter reads as genuinely tailored. It's meant to be the last step in the process, after you've used job-posting-to-cover-letter or written your own base draft, when you're customizing it for a specific application rather than starting from scratch.
Frequently asked questions
What company details should I include?+
Anything specific and genuine works well — a recent product launch, mission statement language, a company value, or news coverage. Vague details like 'they seem like a good company' won't give the tool much to work with.
Will it sound forced or name-dropped?+
It's instructed to weave details in naturally rather than just inserting the company name repeatedly, but review the output to make sure the references read smoothly in context.
Can I personalize the same base letter for multiple companies?+
Yes — that's the intended workflow. Keep one strong generic base letter and run it through this tool separately for each company you're applying to.