Lead QA Engineer
Responsible for test strategy and software quality within a team. Drives QA initiatives, defines testing standards, and leads a team of testers.
Cover letter ready to customise
[Prénom Nom] · [Adresse] · [Email] · [Téléphone]
[Date] · [Ville]
Dear Hiring Manager,
With more than 12 years of experience and a track record of technical leadership on topics related to the Lead QA Engineer role, I'm reaching out with a strong interest in [Company Name]. Your posting really resonated with me, especially [restate one sentence from the ad that hooked you].
My expertise on Selenium, Playwright and Pytest has allowed me to [concrete, quantified outcome, e.g.: cut deployment time by 40% / ship a product to 200k users / industrialise the data pipeline]. I particularly enjoy [what drives you: impact, complexity, autonomy, team…], exactly what I found in your job description.
Beyond technical skills, I'm known for [one or two soft skills drawn from your day-to-day, e.g.: structuring complexity / collaborative work with product and design]. Joining [Company Name] would let me bring that to [a specific challenge mentioned in the ad or visible in your product].
I'd love to discuss your project and the value I can bring. In the meantime, thank you for considering my application, I'm available at your convenience for an interview. Best regards, [First Last]
Letter structure
- Hook (1 sentence): why this company specifically, not a generic letter.
- Paragraph 1: who you are in 1 sentence, plus what resonated in the ad.
- Paragraph 2: your 2 or 3 key skills tied to the role, with a quantified result.
- Paragraph 3: your soft skills and what you want to bring to the team.
- Closing: propose a conversation, without being pushy.
Tips to personalise
- Replace every [bracket] with something concrete, otherwise the recruiter immediately senses the generic letter.
- Don't restate your CV: add what's not there (motivation, reasoning, context).
- 1 page maximum, ideally 250 to 350 words. Shorter equals more read.
- Address it to a person (Hiring Manager, X team) rather than 'Dear Sir/Madam' when possible.
Other roles in the same family
Go further with Traject
Traject takes you from a generic letter to a truly targeted one. You paste the job ad, the AI extracts the key expectations and rewrites every paragraph from your CV: company-specific hook, skills paragraph with your real numbers, motivation aligned with the role's stakes. You show up to the recruiter with a letter that speaks to them, not a generic copy-paste.
Frequently asked questions
Avoid "Following your ad". Start with a concrete hook: "Your [X] approach on [product/project] really stood out to me. Here's why I think I can contribute as a Lead QA Engineer."
Not mandatory for most tech ads. But it remains a strong differentiator: 70% of candidates don't include one, those who do often move ahead.
250 to 350 words, maximum 1 page. Recruiters spend on average 30 seconds skimming it.
Yes, that's precisely what makes it effective. Echoing 2 or 3 keywords from the ad in the letter is essential.