Cover Letter Writing
Everyone recognises the template. “I am writing to express my strong interest in the position.” The hiring manager has read it four hundred times, and it tells them nothing. The letter that works names something specific about the company and connects it to something specific you have done. That takes research, and research takes an hour, and you have nine applications open — so you paste the template and hope the resume carries it.
Skynet closes that gap. It already holds your career history, and it can read the company’s site, their posting, and their recent public writing. The letter it drafts starts from the overlap between what they are trying to do and what you have actually built.
How it works
Set your voice
Give the agent two or three things you have written — an old letter, a post, an email you liked. It learns how you sound so the draft does not read like a press release.
Let it read the company
Point it at the posting and the company. It pulls out what the team is working on, what problem the role exists to solve, and how they talk about themselves.
Draft with evidence
Every claim in the letter maps to something in your history. The agent picks the two or three examples that fit this role and leaves the rest out.
Approve and send
You get a draft, not a send. Cut a paragraph, sharpen the opener, then use it. The agent shows where each specific detail came from so you can check it before it goes to a stranger.
Build it from a prompt
One instruction, reusable for every application.
The result is a letter per role that a human would actually finish reading, without you spending an hour on research you would rather spend preparing for the interview.