How to Write a Cover Letter in India (That Actually Gets Read)

Cover letters are polarising. Some recruiters say they don’t read them. Others say a great one changes everything.

The truth? When a cover letter is optional, submitting one signals effort. When it’s required, a bad one eliminates you. Either way, knowing how to write one is non-negotiable.

Here’s a complete, India-specific guide to writing cover letters that get read — and help you stand out.

Do Recruiters in India Actually Read Cover Letters?

ScenarioDo They Read It?
Explicitly required in JD✅ Yes — it’s assessed
Optional field on application portal⚠️ Maybe — if your CV is shortlisted
Submitted as cold outreach / email application✅ Yes — it’s your first impression
Campus placements via college portal❌ Rarely — screening is automated
Startup applications via email✅ Almost always
Large MNC via ATS (Taleo, Workday)⚠️ Sometimes — often filtered first by ATS

A LinkedIn India survey (2024) found that 48% of Indian hiring managers report that a strong cover letter influenced their decision to shortlist a candidate — particularly at startups, consulting firms, and roles requiring writing skills.

What a Cover Letter Is NOT

Before the format, clear out the common misconceptions:

  • ❌ Not a summary of your CV
  • ❌ Not a formal letter with “To Whomsoever It May Concern”
  • ❌ Not a list of your achievements (that’s the CV’s job)
  • ❌ Not a one-size-fits-all document to copy-paste

A cover letter is a targeted persuasion piece that answers one question: “Why should we pick you for this specific role at this specific company?”

The 4-Paragraph Cover Letter Structure

COVER LETTER FORMULA

Paragraph 1 — The Hook (3–4 sentences)

  → Who you are + why THIS role + why NOW

  → Grab attention in the first 2 lines

Paragraph 2 — Your Value (4–6 sentences)

  → 2–3 specific achievements relevant to the JD

  → Quantify wherever possible

  → Connect your past to their future needs

Paragraph 3 — Why This Company (3–4 sentences)

  → Specific research about the company

  → Show you’ve done your homework

  → Connect their mission to your motivation

Paragraph 4 — The Close (2–3 sentences)

  → Express confidence + eagerness

  → Request next step

  → Thank them

3 Complete Cover Letter Templates

Template 1: Experienced Professional (IT / Product)

Subject: Application for Senior Product Manager — [Your Name]

Dear [Hiring Manager’s Name / “Hiring Team”],

I’m writing to apply for the Senior Product Manager role at [Company Name]. 

Having spent 5 years building B2B SaaS products at [Current/Previous Company], 

with a particular focus on enterprise onboarding and activation metrics, 

this role feels like a precise match — both in terms of domain and ambition.

In my current role at [Company], I led a complete redesign of the user onboarding 

flow, reducing Time-to-Value from 14 days to 4 days and increasing 30-day retention 

by 22%. I also managed a cross-functional team of 8 across engineering, design, 

and data — and drove our Net Revenue Retention from 98% to 114% in 18 months. 

These experiences have directly shaped how I think about product, users, and growth.

What draws me specifically to [Company Name] is your approach to [specific product 

area / mission / recent initiative]. The way your team handled [specific product 

decision or launch you read about] reflects a product philosophy I genuinely align 

with — one that balances user-centricity with business outcomes.

I would love the opportunity to discuss how my experience can contribute to what 

[Company Name] is building. Thank you for your consideration.

Warm regards,

[Your Name]

[Email | LinkedIn | Phone]

Template 2: Fresher (Campus / Entry-Level)

Dear [Hiring Manager / HR Team],

I’m a final-year B.Tech student in Computer Science from [College Name] 

applying for the Software Engineer role. While I’m new to the workforce, 

I’m not new to building things — and your team’s work on [specific product 

feature or company initiative] is exactly the kind of challenge I want to 

grow into.

During my internship at [Company/Project], I built a [specific feature/tool] 

that [specific result — e.g., reduced API response time by 35%]. I also 

completed a machine learning project on [topic] that ranked in the top 10% 

of submissions in [hackathon / competition / class]. My tech stack includes 

Python, Java, and React — and I pick up new tools quickly when the problem 

is interesting.

[Company Name] stood out to me because of your focus on [specific area] 

and the engineering blog post by [team/author] on [topic] — it showed me 

how thoughtfully your team approaches system design problems. That’s the 

environment I want to learn in.

I’d love the chance to speak with you about the role. Thank you for your 

time and consideration.

Best regards,

[Your Name]

[Email | LinkedIn | GitHub | Phone]

Template 3: Career Switcher

Dear [Hiring Manager],

After 4 years in [Current Field], I’m making a deliberate transition into 

[Target Field]. I’m applying for the [Role Name] position at [Company Name] 

because the combination of my domain knowledge in [X] and my newly developed 

skills in [Y] is a unique fit for what you’re building.

In my previous role as [Title] at [Company], I [specific achievement that 

translates to new field]. I’ve spent the past 8 months preparing for this 

transition: completing [specific certification — e.g., Google Data Analytics 

Certificate], building [project description] from scratch, and consulting 

for [freelance project] to develop hands-on experience.

What excites me about [Company Name] is not just the role — it’s the problem 

space. [Specific reason tied to company mission or product]. My background 

in [old field] gives me a lens that pure [new field] professionals may not 

have, and I believe that’s an asset in this context.

I’d welcome the chance to make that case in person. Thank you for considering 

my application.

Best,

[Your Name]

[Email | LinkedIn | Portfolio Link]

The Research Checklist (Before You Write)

Before writing a single word, know:

☐ The hiring manager’s name (check LinkedIn, JD, company website)

☐ One specific recent company development (product launch, funding, expansion)

☐ The exact JD keywords — mirror them naturally in your letter

☐ The company’s stated mission or values

☐ One thing about the company culture (Glassdoor, LinkedIn posts, blogs)

☐ Your top 2 achievements relevant to THIS specific JD (not general ones)

Common Cover Letter Mistakes in India

MistakeWhy It Fails
“To Whomsoever It May Concern”Shows no research; feels copy-pasted
“I am a hardworking professional with excellent skills”No evidence; sounds like everyone else
Repeating the CV word for wordWastes the recruiter’s time
Exceeding 1 pageNobody reads past the fold
Forgetting to change the company nameDisqualifying — yes, this happens
No specific mention of the companyGeneric = rejection
Spelling / grammar errorsCarelessness signal
Ending with “Hoping for a positive reply”Passive; try “I’d welcome the opportunity to discuss…”

Length and Format Guidelines

ElementGuideline
Total length250–400 words (1 page max)
Paragraphs4 (as above)
FontMatch your CV (Calibri 11pt / Lato 11pt)
Salutation“Dear [Name]” if known; “Dear Hiring Manager” if not
Closing“Warm regards” or “Best regards” — not “Yours faithfully”
File formatPDF (same as CV)
File nameFirstName_LastName_CoverLetter_CompanyName.pdf

ATS and Cover Letters

If submitting via an ATS portal (Naukri Easy Apply, LinkedIn Easy Apply, company portal):

  • Include JD keywords naturally — ATS systems sometimes scan cover letters too
  • Don’t use tables or headers — plain paragraphs only
  • Copy-paste as plain text if the portal has a text box
  • PDF upload if there’s an attachment option

Key Statistics

  • 48% of Indian hiring managers say cover letters influence shortlisting (LinkedIn India, 2024)
  • Candidates with cover letters at startups are 2.1× more likely to get callbacks (Indeed India, 2023)
  • Only 34% of Indian job applicants submit cover letters when optional — an easy differentiation opportunity (Naukri, 2024)
  • Average recruiter reads a cover letter in ~30 seconds — the first paragraph decides everything

References

  1. LinkedIn India (2024) — Hiring Manager Insights: Cover Letter Impact — [linkedin.com/business/talent](https://business.linkedin.com/talent-solutions)
  2. Naukri.com (2024) — Application Behaviour Trends in India — [naukri.com/blog](https://www.naukri.com/blog)
  3. Indeed India (2023) — Cover Letter Effectiveness Data — [indeed.com/career-advice](https://www.indeed.com/career-advice)
  4. Glassdoor India (2023) — What Recruiters Look for Beyond the CV — [glassdoor.co.in](https://www.glassdoor.co.in)
  5. NASSCOM (2024) — India Tech Talent Acquisition Report — [nasscom.in](https://nasscom.in)

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