A complete, annotated cover letter for an registered nurse role. Every paragraph is broken down — so you can see exactly what makes hiring managers keep reading.
Scroll down to see the full cover letter, then read why each section works.
I’m writing to apply for the Staff RN position in your Medical ICU. I’m a BSN, RN, CCRN with 5 years of MICU experience at two Level 1 trauma centers in Houston — and Mayo’s reputation for evidence-based critical care practice is the reason I’m pursuing this specific unit.
At Houston Methodist, I manage 1–2 patient ICU assignments in a 24-bed MICU, with competencies in ventilator management, vasoactive drip titration (norepinephrine, vasopressin, dobutamine), and CRRT. I serve as charge nurse 3 shifts per week, coordinating admissions, discharges, and transfers with 96% bed-turnover compliance. Over the past year I led 12 rapid response activations with zero code blues on my assigned patients — a record I attribute to early recognition training and disciplined SBAR handoff within 60 seconds of clinical deterioration.
Before Houston Methodist, I spent 14 months in a 20-bed surgical ICU at Memorial Hermann Texas Medical Center, caring for post-operative cardiac surgery, trauma, and neurosurgical patients. I’ve precepted 6 new graduate RNs through ICU residency programs, with all 6 passing competency validation on first attempt. The reason I want to move to Mayo specifically: I’m planning to apply to CRNA programs within the next 2 years, and Mayo’s case mix and anesthesia exposure would give me the clinical foundation to be competitive.
I’d welcome a conversation about how my critical care experience and charge nurse background could contribute to your MICU team. I’m available for a call or interview at your convenience.
Five things this cover letter does that most registered nurse applications don’t.
Rachel doesn’t open with “I am a dedicated nurse seeking a rewarding opportunity.” She names the unit (Medical ICU), the credential (BSN, RN, CCRN), and the facility designation (Level 1 trauma centers). In specialty nursing hiring, the first sentence must establish clinical fit — everything else follows from that.
Ventilator management, vasoactive drip titration with named medications, CRRT, rapid response activations. These are not general descriptions of “ICU experience” — they are the specific competencies a MICU nurse manager will look for. Naming the drips (norepinephrine, vasopressin, dobutamine) signals hands-on familiarity, not textbook knowledge.
96% bed-turnover compliance and zero diversion events are operational metrics that matter to a nurse manager running a 24-bed unit. Charge nurse experience tells the hiring manager Rachel can manage patient flow, not just patient care — a critical distinction for anyone being considered for a leadership or clinical ladder role.
Rachel doesn’t just say she wants to work at Mayo. She explains why: CRNA preparation, case mix diversity, anesthesia exposure. This makes the application feel strategic rather than opportunistic, which is exactly what a nurse manager wants to hear from a candidate who will need 12–18 months of investment before reaching full productivity.
Rachel names “critical care experience and charge nurse background” as her specific value proposition, not vague “skills and passion.” The close mirrors the summary — direct, specific, and respectful of the reader’s time.
The weak version could go to any hospital for any unit. The strong version names the unit, the credential, the years, and the facility level — immediately establishing specialty fit.
The weak version describes activities. The strong version names procedures, medications, equipment, and operational metrics — things a nurse manager can verify and benchmark.
The weak close is generic. The strong close names the specific clinical value being offered and makes a direct, professional ask.
A great cover letter opens the door, but your resume is what gets you hired. Turquoise tailors your resume to match any job description — same skills, better framing, every time.
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