Try to apply for opened game prop position, but not sure what to put in the cover letter. I am a self-taught junior artist. I know there are talented artists studied by self and landed the job successfully. They always said the quality of the portfolio is key to entry, but they never talk about the cover letter. Does the HR ever look at the cover letter? Is there any tip that you pros can offer?
I used to work as a production artist or graphic designer. I quitted the job to pursue the dream of 3D. I studied and created my portfolio during one year of full-time study at home. Should I say something about this experience in the cover letter?
Any help is greatly appreciated and merry Christmas to all of you!
Replies
I very rarely write a rather long cover letter because for me I feel like it's not really the thing that a HR recruiter is going to focus on or get lacthed on to.
It's all about the portfolio firstly and than the CV and the experience ect.
I have a short personal statement in my CV detailing all my qualities, motives and outlook. I'm always thinking of how much time a recruiter would have to go through an actual detailed cover letter if they have to go through 100's of applicants.
My layout for my cover letter is usually a few short paragraphs for instance:-
1) rather dumb but I do it anyway I'd say what I'm emailing for and where I found the job (HR very often want to know how you heard about the job)
2)Very briefly why I think I would be good for the job
3)my CV is attached and my website link is below
4)looking forward to a reply.
So I keep doing it like this because it's worked.
HOWEVER, if the job I'm applying for is the perfect job, the one im destined for, the one I've been working for or the game I've dreamt working I'll make damn sure that's why I'm applying. I'll make my personal attachment known or my love or appreciation is known straight away.
Last thing, about the selftaught thing I think it's something you just have in your personal statement. I always see cover letters as a rather enthusiastic wave until they acknowledge you and get back to you to want to know more, that would be an interview, obviously.
So I hope this has helped some way. All the best.
Keep it short but try to come across as a real person. Info I can get from your resume doesn't need to be in the coverletter. Your coverletter can make a job application much more personal than a generic anonymous bullet point resume (and don't kid yourself, most resumes will look pretty much the same for art positions).
Now your cover letter won't win the application over your art. But it can sway the favors towards e.g. inviting you, because you sound interesting, or because, of all the similarly skilled guys, you were the one who got the extra mile to write a letter. When applying, don't dismiss the small things - sometimes they have more weight than you think they do!
Also, about putting "I've always wanted to work for XXXX" You want to be aware of the work the studio has done, and it's fine to mention it, but you also want to avoid being a fan boy of the studio unless you are sincere and keep it reasonable. If you put that XXXX is your favorite studio, make sure you can name more than 1 game they've produced and that you actually know about the studio.
Great points @ZacD, definitely consider a lot of you've mentioned and add to the new cover letters i'll be writing next year....
As a person who has had to sift through cover letters and resumes, I only read them if the portfolio is really good and I want to know more about the person.
The ones I was able to tolerate reading, where ones that the person dropped the robotic formal BS and spoke like a human being.
Don't be boring, don't use standard lines like "I've always wanted to work here" etc. and keep it personal, short and slightly formal.
Regarding your portfolio link, put it somewhere in the beginning of your resume and under your name, i.e.:
Kind regards,
Skycity02
Portfolio: https://www.artstation.com/artist/daiwang
Skype: etc.
At least that is what I was thought, you can add links to your LinkedIn and what not there too.
Art is all that matters like others have said , true , but if the ad says cover letter , ignoring it might show that you can't read the requirements of the advertisement of the position.