Job hunting electronically requires finesse. Keeping your cover letter with your resume, in a single document lessens the chance of losing that impressive letter, and it's easier for a potential employer to print. Here is one way to optimize your time and, maybe, impress a hiring manager.
Creating sections for a cover letter and resume
To keep your cover letter and your resume together, you can create them in the same document and use a separate section, with different information and formatting, for each.
Note: You can use the same technique to create title pages, tables of contents, and other pages where you want different margins and headers and footers.
Insert a section break
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Go to File > Options.
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Select > Display.
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Under Always show these formatting marks on the screen, select Paragraph marks.
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Click or tap where you want to insert a section break for your cover letter.
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Go to Layout and select the down arrow next to Breaks.
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Under Section Breaks, select Next Page.
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Cover letter header
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Cover letter footer
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Resume header
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Section break
Make the header and footer different from the previous section
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Select the first page of the resume (not cover letter).
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Go to Insert > Header.
Select Edit Header.
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Click or tap anywhere in the header and select Link to Previous to clear it.
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Select Close Header and Footer.
Start your resume headers and footers on the second page of your resume
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Select the second page of the resume.
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Go to Insert > Header.
Select Edit Header.
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Click or tap anywhere in the header and select Different First Page.
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Select Close Header and Footer.
Use different layouts for your cover letter and your resume
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Set the layout for your cover letter, and then select the first page of your resume.
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Go to Layout and select Page Setup dialog launcher
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Under Apply to, select This point forward.
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Make your layout changes and select OK.
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Cover letter header
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Cover letter footer
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Resume header
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Resume footer