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What to Write in the Email Subject Line When Sending Your Resume (15 Examples)

What to Write in the Email Subject Line When Sending Your Resume (15 Examples)

Not sure what to put in the email subject line when sending your resume? Check out 15 ready-made examples for Mozambique, with simple structure, mistakes to avoid, and how to adapt them to any job opening.

Reading the vacancy to the end already avoids half the mistakes.

Inademy03/04/2026Updated 27/04/20269 min read0 Comments2026
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Not sure what to put in the email subject line when sending your resume? Check out 15 ready-made examples for Mozambique, with simple structure, mistakes to avoid, and how to adapt them to any job opening.

Email Subject for Sending a CV: how to write it correctly in Mozambique

Good and bad examples of email subjects for sending a CV
Generic subject lines look amateurish; clear ones help HR identify the application

The best email subject for sending a CV is the one that helps the recruiter understand, in seconds, which job it is, who the candidate is, and whether there is a required reference. If the job ad says exactly which subject to use, copy that text without changing anything. If it does not, use a simple structure:Application – [job title] – [reference, if any] – [your name].

The ideal subject line for your CV

The email subject may seem like a small detail, but it is not. It is the first piece of information the recruiter sees, it helps organize the inbox, and it can influence whether the message is opened quickly or mistaken for something generic. Professional email best practices recommend descriptive, clear, action-oriented subject lines.

In Mozambique, this matters even more because some job ads state exactly what must go in the subject line. ProAzul requires a specific subject for the application and warns that messages outside that format will not be considered; the National Institute of Health asks for the job title and competition number in the subject. At the same time, some employers receive applications through their own form, as happens on theBCI recruitment page, which means email is not always the right channel.

The golden rule: follow the job ad exactly as written

If the vacancy says “state the job title in the subject line,” do that. If it says “include the competition reference,” include it. If it provides exact wording, copy that wording exactly. At this point, the email subject is not a space for creativity. It is a basic test of attention, reading, and ability to follow instructions.

Practical rule:when the ad gives instructions, you do not improvise.

This applies especially to public competitions, funded projects, and processes with many applications. In these cases, an incorrect subject line can disrupt screening or even make the application fall outside the format required by the recruiter.

If the ad says nothing, use this formula

When there is no specific instruction, the best approach is to use a short, descriptive, easy-to-find subject line. The general recommendation is to indicate the purpose of the email, the job title, any reference or Job ID, and your name.

Use one of these structures:

Application – [Job Title] – [Your name]
Application – [Job Title] – [Ref./Job ID] – [Your name]
Speculative application – [Area/Role] – [Your name]
Competition – [Job] – [Competition No.] – [Your name]

This logic works because it immediately answers four questions: what the email is, which job it is for, what the reference is, and who sent it.

Which subject line to use in each situation

The templates below were created by Inademy based on best practices for clarity, job identification, reference, and literal compliance with the ad.

Situation

Recommended subject line

When to use

Advertised vacancy without reference

Application – Administrative Assistant – Ana Cossa

When the ad asks for applications by email but does not include a code

Advertised vacancy with reference

Application – Accounting Technician – Ref. 04/2026 – Mauro Baloi

When the vacancy has a reference or Job ID

Public competition

Competition – Laboratory Technician – Competition 03/2026 – Carla Uamusse

When the notice asks for the competition number

Internship

Internship – Human Resources – Nilza Guambe

For internship applications

First job

Application – Shop Assistant – First Job – Celso Manjate

When you want to signal a junior profile

Speculative application

Speculative application – Administration – Marta Mondlane

When you are not responding to a specific vacancy

Vacancy in English

Application – Procurement Officer – João Mabote

When the ad is in English

Vacancy in multiple provinces

Application – Field Officer – Nampula – Pedro Chissano

When the location helps distinguish the vacancy

15 email subject examples for sending a CV

The following examples are practical templates created from the formula above. Adapt the job title, reference, and your name to the real situation.

For an advertised vacancy

  1. Application – Administrative Assistant – Ana Cossa

  2. Application – Accounting Technician – Ref. 04/2026 – Mauro Baloi

  3. Application – Receptionist – Joana Matusse

  4. Application – Salesperson – Maputo – Júlio Sitoe

For an internship or first job

  1. Internship – Human Resources – Elsa Guivala

  2. Internship – Digital Marketing – Teresa Cossa

  3. Application – Store Assistant – First Job – Paulo Nhampassa

For openings, projects, and processes with a reference

  1. Recruitment – Laboratory Technician – Recruitment 03/2026 – Carla Uamusse

  2. Recruitment – Procurement Officer – 02/CA/2026 – Amândio Bila

  3. Application – Field Officer – Nampula – Ana Chivale

  4. Application – Driver – Cabo Delgado – Bruno Chongo

For speculative applications

  1. Speculative application – Administration – Marta Mondlane

  2. Speculative application – Logistics – Hermínio Mucavele

When the ad is in English

  1. Application – Procurement Officer – João Mabote

  2. Application – Finance Intern – Nilza Manjate

What to include — and what to leave out

A good subject line should only include what helps the recruiter identify and file the application: the job title, the reference when there is one, and your name. If there are specific instructions, they come first. If not, keep the subject line short and useful. It also makes sense to keep the same language as the ad.

Include:

  • job title;

  • reference, Job ID, or recruitment number, when available;

  • your name;

  • “application,” “internship,” or “recruitment,” when that helps identify the type of submission.

Avoid:

  • vague subject lines such as “CV” or “Job request”;

  • “URGENT,” emojis, and excessive punctuation;

  • text written entirely in uppercase;

  • overly long details;

  • changing the subject line requested in the ad.

These precautions follow the same core logic: clarity, professionalism, and respect for the process instructions.

Common mistakes that make the email look amateurish

Below are some common mistakes — and how to fix them.

Weak subject line

Problem

Better version

CV

Too generic

Application – Administrative Assistant – Ana Cossa

URGENT APPLICATION!!!

It may sound unprofessional or spammy

Application – Logistics Assistant – Ana Cossa

Job request

It does not say which role it is for

Speculative application – Administration – Ana Cossa

Assistant vacancy

Missing name and, sometimes, reference

Application – Assistant – Ref. 12/2026 – Ana Cossa

Subject line different from the notice

It may break the formal instruction

Copy the exact subject line requested

Avoiding generic, long, informal, or non-standard subject lines is a recommendation repeated in career guides and becomes even more important when the ad itself imposes a mandatory format.

Three practical scenarios

1) Job posted without subject line instructions

If the ad only says “send your CV by email,” without explaining the subject line, use a simple formula:Application – Finance Assistant – [Your name]. This already allows the recruiter to understand the purpose of the email without opening the message.

2) Recruitment or vacancy with a mandatory reference

If the notice says to include the job title and the recruitment number, do exactly that. If it provides exact wording for the subject line, copy that text without adapting it. In this scenario, “inventing a better subject line” is a mistake, not an improvement.

3) Speculative application

When there is no published vacancy, the subject line needs to make that clear.Speculative application – Administrative Area – [Your name]works better than simply “CV”, because it helps the recipient understand that it is an application for a talent pool or a future opportunity.

4) Company with its own application form

If the organization has its own recruitment page, submit the application through the indicated channel. In those cases, spending time preparing an email subject line may be irrelevant, because the application will not be received by email.

Email Subject for Sending a CV: 15 Correct Examples
Email Subject for Sending a CV: 15 Correct Examples

Checklist before clicking “Send”

Before submitting the application, check these points. They bring together the requirements most commonly repeated in formal notices with general professional email best practices.

  • I read the ad to the end.

  • I copied the exact subject line, if the ad included one.

  • I included the job title, reference, and name, if the ad did not provide specific instructions.

  • I kept the subject line short and clear.

  • I used the same language as the ad.

  • I checked the attachments, format, and number of requested files.

  • I reviewed spelling, numbers, and references.

  • I sent the application through the correct channel: email or form.

The best email subject line for sending a CV is not the most creative one. It is the clearest one. If the ad defines the subject line, follow it exactly. If it does not, use job title + reference + name. This small detail shows organization, attention to detail, and respect for the application process.

After getting the email subject line right, the next filter is the resume itself. At Inademy, readers cancreate a professional resume, use cover letter templates, track job openings, validateskills through examsand consult theInademy Guideto turn information into a stronger application — within a journey that connects learning, proof, and opportunity. Also read aboutHow to prepare for a job interview in Mozambique


FAQ

Can I write just “Resume” in the subject line?

It is not ideal. “Resume” is vague and forces the recruiter to open the message to understand which position it refers to. A descriptive subject line with the position and name makes screening easier and gives a more professional impression.

Should I include my name in the subject line?

Yes, in most cases it makes sense. Career guides recommend including your name to make candidate identification easier, especially when the posting does not already provide a required subject line.

Do I need to include the competition number or Job ID?

Whenever the posting asks for it, yes. In some cases this is mandatory; in others, it helps locate the application in the inbox and internal filters.

What should the subject line look like for a speculative application?

A safe formula is:Speculative application – [area/role] – [your name]. This immediately makes it clear that you are not responding to a specific opening, but want to join the talent pool or be considered for future opportunities.

Can I use emojis, “URGENT,” or lots of exclamation marks?

It is not recommended, unless the posting itself asks for something very specific. Subject lines that are too informal, long, or exaggerated can seem unprofessional.

What if the company uses a form instead of email?

In that case, follow the official channel. If the application is collected through a recruitment form, the email subject line is no longer the priority because the process no longer goes through the HR inbox.

If the vacancy is in English, should I write the subject line in English?

As a rule, yes. The safest approach is to follow the language and instructions of the posting. If the vacancy is in English and the job title is as well, keeping the subject line in English helps preserve the exact reference to the position.

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