How CVCircuit Writes Your Cover Letter While Tailoring Your CV
Two documents, one click
Most AI CV tools focus on the CV and leave you to write the cover letter yourself. CVCircuit's browser extension handles both — simultaneously, in the same tailoring step.
Here is exactly how the combined tailoring process works.
Step 1: Detect the job
When you're browsing a job listing on Indeed, LinkedIn, Reed, Glassdoor, Totaljobs, Monster, or CV-Library, the extension automatically detects and extracts the full job description, company name, job title, and location. You don't copy anything.
Step 2: Select your CV and toggle cover letter
In the extension panel, you choose which CV to tailor from your saved CVs. If you want a cover letter too, toggle Tailor cover letter on and select your base cover letter from the dropdown. If you have multiple base cover letters — for different types of roles — you can pick the most relevant one.
Step 3: Hit Tailor CV
One click sends both documents to CVCircuit's AI, along with the full job description and company details. The AI works on both simultaneously.
What the AI does with your cover letter
The AI reads your base cover letter to understand your professional story. It reads the job description to understand what the employer needs. Then it rewrites the cover letter so that:
- The opening hooks on something specific to this role or company
- The body highlights the experience most relevant to this posting
- Missing keywords from the job description appear naturally in the text
- The tone is consistent with your CV and appropriate for the employer
Step 4: Download or attach both
When tailoring is complete, you see separate download and attach options for your CV and cover letter. You can save both as PDFs to your downloads folder, or use CVCircuit's file injection feature to attach them directly to upload fields on the job application portal.
Why this matters
The cover letter and CV work together as a package. When both are tailored to the same job description using the same AI in the same step, they're genuinely complementary — they reinforce each other rather than feeling like separate documents that were written at different times.
For job seekers who want to submit polished, consistent applications without spending hours on each one, this is the practical answer.