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

Most cover letters in India are copy-paste templates that recruiters skip after the first sentence. A survey by Naukri.com found that 68% of Indian recruiters spend less than 30 seconds reading a cover letter — and most stop reading when the opening line is generic. But the 32% who read carefully say a strong cover letter can move a candidate to the top of the pile. Here’s how to write one that earns that attention.

Do You Even Need a Cover Letter in India?

Job Application ChannelCover Letter Required?
Naukri.com / LinkedIn applyRarely mandatory, but adds impact if the role asks for one
Company career portal direct applicationOften optional — always submit one
Email application to recruiter / HRAlways include — it is your email body
Referral applicationBrief note is enough — let the referral carry weight
Internship via InternshalaStrongly recommended — sets you apart from auto-applies
Consulting / banking applicationMandatory — poor cover letter eliminates you

Rule of thumb: If there’s a field for it, fill it. If you’re emailing a recruiter directly, your email IS your cover letter.

The 5-Part Cover Letter Structure

SectionLengthPurpose
Opening hook1–2 linesMake them want to read more
Why this role2–3 linesShow specific alignment with the role
What you bring3–4 linesYour 2 best achievements, with numbers
Why this company2 linesProve you researched them specifically
Close + CTA1–2 linesAsk for the next step clearly

Total length: 200–300 words. Never more than one page. Never less than 150 words.

Opening Hooks That Get Read

Generic (skip-worthy):

> “I am writing to express my interest in the Software Engineer position at your esteemed organisation…”

Strong openings:

> “When Razorpay processed its 1 billionth transaction last year, I was a developer on the payments team that made it happen — and I’d like to bring that experience to your product.”

> “I’ve reduced customer acquisition costs by 34% using data-driven campaign strategies at two D2C brands. I believe I can do the same for [Company].”

> “Three months ago, I built a machine learning model that cut fraud detection time at [Company] from 48 hours to 4. I’d like to explore how that kind of thinking fits your data science team.”

The formula for a strong opener:

[Specific achievement or insight] + [Connection to this company or role]

Writing “Why This Company” (The Section Most People Get Wrong)

Lazy: “I am impressed by your company’s growth and innovation.”

Strong: Research one specific thing — a product launch, a news story, a company value — and connect it to why you want to be there.

CompanyWhat to Reference
Swiggy“Your Instamart launch and the logistical complexity of 10-minute delivery”
HDFC Bank“Your digital banking transformation and the PayZapp super app strategy”
Infosys Cobalt“The cloud-first transformation work your India delivery team is driving”
Zepto“Your approach to hyperlocal supply chain optimisation at scale”

Where to find this information: Company blog, LinkedIn page, recent news articles, Glassdoor reviews, and the job description itself.

The XYZ Formula for Achievement Lines

Use Google’s XYZ formula in your achievement bullets:

> “Accomplished [X] as measured by [Y], by doing [Z].”

WeakStrong (XYZ)
“Improved sales performance”“Grew B2B sales by 28% (₹1.2Cr incremental revenue) by restructuring the cold outreach sequence and adding mid-funnel nurture emails.”
“Led a team project”“Delivered the product redesign 2 weeks early by restructuring the sprint process, reducing cross-team blockers by 40%.”
“Handled customer complaints”“Improved CSAT from 3.4 to 4.2 (5-scale) by implementing a 24-hour resolution SLA for Tier-1 complaints.”

Email Cover Letter Template (For Direct Applications)

When applying via email, your email body is your cover letter. Structure it as:

Subject: Application — [Role Name] | [Your Name] | [1 Key Differentiator]

Email body:

> Hi [Recruiter/Manager Name],

>

> [Opening hook — 1 sentence with your best achievement and connection to the company]

>

> I’m applying for the [Role] position. In my [X years] at [Current/Previous Company], I [Achievement 1 with number] and [Achievement 2 with number]. I believe this experience directly prepares me for [specific challenge the role addresses].

>

> [Company name] specifically interests me because [one specific, researched reason]. I’d welcome the opportunity to discuss how my background aligns.

>

> My resume is attached. I’m happy to connect for a 20-minute call at your convenience.

>

> Best regards,

> [Your Name]

> [Phone] | [LinkedIn URL]

Common Cover Letter Mistakes in India

MistakeWhat It SignalsFix
“To whomsoever it may concern”Zero personalisationFind the recruiter’s name on LinkedIn
Repeating resume bullet pointsNo added valueTell the story behind the achievement
Starting with “I am pleased to…”Generic templateStart with an achievement or insight
Addressing the wrong companyLazy, undetected copy-pasteAlways re-read before sending
No specific reason for choosing this companyNo genuine interestResearch 1 specific company fact
Longer than 1 pageDisrespects recruiter’s timeCut ruthlessly to 250 words

Cover Letter Checklist

☐ Addressed to a named person (not “Sir/Ma’am” or “Whomsoever”)

☐ Opening line includes a specific achievement

☐ Contains 2 achievements with numbers

☐ Includes 1 specific reason for choosing this company

☐ Total word count: 200–300 words

☐ No spelling or grammar errors (run through Grammarly)

☐ Saved as PDF with filename: FirstName-LastName-CoverLetter.pdf

☐ Customised for this specific role (not a template)

☐ Ends with a clear, confident call to action

References:

  1. Naukri.com — Cover Letter and Application Best Practices — https://www.naukri.com/blog/cover-letter-tips
  2. Google Re:Work — XYZ Achievement Formula — https://rework.withgoogle.com/guides/hiring-shape-the-candidate-experience
  3. LinkedIn India — Application Insights for Job Seekers — https://business.linkedin.com/talent-solutions/resources/india
  4. Grammarly — Business Writing Guide — https://www.grammarly.com/business/writing-guides
  5. Harvard Business Review — How to Write a Cover Letter — https://hbr.org/2014/02/how-to-write-a-cover-letter

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