The Catch-22 of the job market: You need experience to get a job, but you need a job to get experience.
If you are a fresh graduate, a student, or self-taught developer, your cover letter is your secret weapon. While your resume might look empty, your cover letter is where you prove you have potential .
1. Sell Your "Unpaid" Work
Just because you weren't paid for it doesn't mean it wasn't work. Did you build a React app for a hackathon? Did you organize a university event? That is experience.
Example: "While I haven't officially held a DevOps title, I architected the CI/CD pipeline for our university's robotics club, reducing deployment time by 50% using GitHub Actions."
2. Focus on "Transferable Skills"
If you worked as a barista, you learned time management and working under pressure. If you were a tutor, you learned communication. Map these to the job.
3. Show, Don't Just Tell
Link to your GitHub. Link to your portfolio. If you don't have experience, you must have evidence of capability.
The "No Experience" Template
Check out our Perfect Cover Letter Structure guide for the basics, but adapt the "Meat" paragraph to focus on projects rather than previous roles .