Wednesday 17 October 2012

A recruiter's ranting: Cover Letter


Definition of cover letter from About.com: A cover letter is a document sent with your resume to provide additional information on your skills and experience. A cover letter typically provides detailed information on why you are qualified for the job you are applying for. Effective cover letters explain the reasons for your interest in the specific organization and identify your most relevant skills or experiences.”


When writing a cover letter, please remember to customize it to catch the recruiter’s eye, or, you don’t write it at all. I ever say a Cover letter stating “…Hi, I’m Xxx & I very happy if you can contact me at 01x-xxx…

Error when you put something like this in the cover letter:
  1. Wrong usage; please look at the definition again.
  2. Bad English! Please use formal English as best as you can in your cover letter & resume or else you’re automatically rejected. (Except if your employment history is THAT GOOD or your expected salary is really low)

Please do not send a default cover letter that basically just states your name & contact number. It’s boring & we can look inside your resume for those details. Write something more, write your working experience, write what you can handle, summarize it in one paragraph! Use you cover letter to impress the recruiter even before they view your resume. I had seen cover letter that starts with testimonials from the candidate’s previous employer. It’s impressive & although it’s long, I actually finished reading it. It made me feel it’s my lost if I didn’t hire her.

Tips: Please remember to ask your friends with good English to proof check your cover letter & resume, so that the contents will keep us recruiter reading. & remember; do not exaggerate or just copy the cover letter content from the internet. We will notice because other people are doing it, too. (We’re human too, you know. We read hundreds of resumes a day; do not expect us to research every candidate in detail. That is why we always says: Only shortlisted candidate will be contacted.)

Tuesday 4 September 2012

Food Review: Yau Yat Seng / You Yi Chen Restaurant @ Section 19

Today me & my colleague happily went out for lunch, & my colleague insisted she want to try out this restaurant, You Yi Chen which located at Section 19, opposite of UMW Toyota. After a some hardship in looking for a parking, we're here.

All credits to Tamciakpo for the pics above

What I can say is; im majorly disappointed to the food served. We have 5 person, & we ordered 5 different dishes.

Me: Preserved Vege Glass Noodles (RM9)
Colleague A: Cheese baked Fish Fillets (RM11)
Colleague B: Fish & Chips with Cheese Sauce (RM12)
Colleague C: Fish Fillet Wrapped in Egg (RM10)
Colleague D: Fried Shanghai Ramen with Vege (RM6)
**Price above is rounded figure, tax (10%) not inclusive. (eg: RM8.95--> RM9)

I got pickled papaya & preserved vege in my soup noodles. Basically the taste of the soup came from the pickles + preserved vege + black pepper + salt, & you can say its not tasty at all. Instant noodle's soup have better flavour than that! Another thing I'm particular with; I did put a note to exclude the spring onion in the order paper, but they still put it in my bowl.So, don't expect a good service here.

The Cheese Baked Fillets & Fillet Pataya is almost like what you had at Kimgary Restaurant etc, nothing much to comment. Fish & Chips is in ultimately small portions, ok for people with small tummy. The Fried Shanghai Ramen? The noodles were way too soft, very small portion & salty. Did I mentioned that the Ramen came after me & my other colleagues finished our food?


Ratings
Environment: 7/10 (Nice environment, comfy seats, dimmed light, cold)
Service: 5/10 (Short of staffs, do not pay details to the order, food came late)
Food: 0.5/10 (presentation ok, not yummy, small portions)
Price: 5/10 (a little bit expensive for the food quality & portions)

Recommendations: Not recommended.

For more reviews on this restaurant, please check out: http://ling239.blogspot.com/2010/05/yau-yat-seng-3-two-square.html