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James Manton
14 House Street
Roundabout Road
Swindon, SW1 4GT
8 December 2012
Dionne Delahunt
Graduate Recruitment Manager
Goldman Sachs International
188 Glean Street
London, EC4B 2HE
Dear Ms Delahunt,
Please consider my application for the investment banking analyst position at
Goldman Sachs International, as advertised on TARGETjobs. My conversations
with Sandra Moorewood and Malcolm Willow at the investment banking careers day
organised by TARGETjobs Events on 3 November has reinforced my interest in the
programme and organisation. I am eager to be part of a team that values teamwork,
integrity and honesty, and puts these principles at the heart of its strategy.
The two-year graduate scheme will provide me with an excellent opportunity
to develop my existing skills and knowledge to support Goldman Sachs’ current
investment banking strategy. My summer internship with the bank, where I worked
on a long-term project that focused on emerging economies and the strengths and
weaknesses of potential acquisition targets for a large UK client base, has equipped
me with the teamworking, analytical, research and organisational skills that you seek
in applicants.
I have also demonstrated, both at university and in my working life, other qualities
that are relevant to the position, such as leadership potential and creativity. During
my maths and economics degree at the London School of Economics (for which
I have a current average of 77.8% and am on track to graduate with a first), I have
arranged several inter-university maths contests through the LSE Maths and Stats
society. My teammates and I increased the society’s membership by 38% in eight
months on the back of these competitions.
I’m keen to discuss this opportunity with you in person and am available
for interview at your convenience. I look forward to your response.
Yours sincerely,
James Manton
Annotated investment banking covering letter
Your covering letter shouldn’t
exceed one page of A4 or
three–four paragraphs.
Mention employees you’ve
met, but only if they’ll
remember speaking with you.
Include events you’ve
attended where you have
engaged with staff – banks
like to see that applicants
have tried to engage with
them.
Find out who to address the
letter to. It will usually be the
graduate recruitment manager.
Write a formal letter with your
name and address in the top right
corner and the recruiter’s name
a
nd address on the left.
State the role that you’re
applying for.
Say why you want to work for
this particular bank.
Show that you’ve researched
the employer and know what
its plans are.
Include examples.
Link your skills with those
sought by the business.
Non-academic and non-
finance experiences should
be included if you’ve
developed relevant
transferable skills.
You should sign off your letter with
‘Yours sincerely’ if you have addressed
the letter to a named person.
Make sure you check the
form of address to use:
should it be Ms, Mrs or Miss?
Include the results of the
contribution you’ve made.
Mention where you saw the
job advertised.
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