Brooks
New member
- Joined
- Feb 25, 2026
- Messages
- 11
What's up, everyone! 
I feel like I need to share a massive W because I’m still riding the high. I just landed a summer internship with a pretty big marketing firm in the city, and I swear, the thing that sealed the deal was a classic, perfectly executed 5 paragraph essay.
I know, I know. It sounds boring. We complain about them constantly. But hear me out! The application asked for a cover letter, which is basically just persuasive writing, right? And the prompt was something like, "Describe a time you identified a need and developed a creative solution." My brain immediately went to a mess I helped organize for a campus club event last year. It was a total logistical nightmare, but we turned it around.
Instead of trying to be super "creative" with my structure, I just defaulted to the 5 paragraph essay format we all learned in high school. It was my secret weapon.
It’s like the plain white t-shirt of writing. It might not be flashy, but it’s reliable, it works for almost everything, and when it fits well, it looks professional as hell.
I’m not saying we should write all our lit papers this way, but for real-world persuasion? It's a power move. Anyone else had a moment where a basic academic skill turned into a real-world superpower? Let’s hear your wins!

I feel like I need to share a massive W because I’m still riding the high. I just landed a summer internship with a pretty big marketing firm in the city, and I swear, the thing that sealed the deal was a classic, perfectly executed 5 paragraph essay.
I know, I know. It sounds boring. We complain about them constantly. But hear me out! The application asked for a cover letter, which is basically just persuasive writing, right? And the prompt was something like, "Describe a time you identified a need and developed a creative solution." My brain immediately went to a mess I helped organize for a campus club event last year. It was a total logistical nightmare, but we turned it around.
Instead of trying to be super "creative" with my structure, I just defaulted to the 5 paragraph essay format we all learned in high school. It was my secret weapon.
- Paragraph 1 (Intro): Hooked them with the chaos of the initial event planning. Bam. Thesis: "By identifying communication breakdowns, proposing a tiered task system, and leading the implementation, I was able to turn a failing event into our club's most successful fundraiser."
- Paragraph 2: Talked about the specific communication breakdowns I identified. Super clear. One main point.
- Paragraph 3: Laid out my proposed solution (the tiered task system). Boom. Next point.
- Paragraph 4: Described how I led the team to implement it, including the challenges we faced. Solid third point.
- Paragraph 5 (Conclusion): Summarized the insane success—we raised 40% more than expected—and tied it back to the skills I'd bring to the firm.
It’s like the plain white t-shirt of writing. It might not be flashy, but it’s reliable, it works for almost everything, and when it fits well, it looks professional as hell.
I’m not saying we should write all our lit papers this way, but for real-world persuasion? It's a power move. Anyone else had a moment where a basic academic skill turned into a real-world superpower? Let’s hear your wins!