The moment a job goes live on a platform like Wakanda Jobs, dozens — sometimes hundreds — of applications start coming in. If you are applying online in 2026, you are not competing against a handful of people in a room. You are competing against a wave.
The good news is that most applications are average. Standing out does not require luck. It requires doing a few things better than everyone else.
1. Read the job post twice before you apply
Most candidates skim. They see a job title they like, check the salary, and hit apply. If you read the full post carefully, you will catch specific language the employer uses — keywords, required tools, values they mention. Reflect that language back in your application. It signals that you actually read what they wrote.
2. Customise your CV for each role — even slightly
A generic CV that lists everything you have ever done is not a strong tool. For each role, move the most relevant experience to the top. Drop items that have nothing to do with the position. Recruiters spend less than ten seconds on a first scan. Make those seconds count.
3. Write a cover letter — even when it is optional
When a job post says "cover letter optional," most people skip it. That is exactly why writing one puts you ahead. Keep it short — three paragraphs. Say why you want this role specifically, what you bring that is directly relevant, and one thing you have done that proves you can do the work.
4. Apply within the first 48 hours
Employers often start reviewing applications before the deadline. Roles sometimes get filled before they even close. Being in the first batch of applicants means your application is seen when the hiring manager still has fresh eyes and open spots.
5. Follow up — once
If you have not heard back within a week of the application closing, a brief, polite follow-up email is acceptable. It shows genuine interest. Keep it short: confirm you applied, reiterate your enthusiasm, and offer to send anything else they need.
6. Get your online presence in order
Many employers will search your name before calling you. Make sure your LinkedIn profile is complete and matches your CV. If you have a portfolio or GitHub, link to it. If your social media is visible, make sure it presents you well.
Standing out online in Africa is possible for anyone who treats their application as something worth crafting — not just submitting. The ones who get callbacks are usually not the most qualified. They are the most intentional.