We investigate theoretically the coherent resonant enhancement of three-field mixing processes in a nonlinear medium characterized by a spin multiplet. The discussion is based on the analytical steady-state solutions of the density matrix equation. These solutions do not assume simplified approximations concerning the number of levels or the relative magnitudes of the Rabi frequencies and relaxation rates. Consequently, they contain interference effects among single-and multiplequantum absorption and emission processes, and parametric processes. This makes it possible to maximize the efficiency and the resonant enhancement of the frequency conversion in a nonlinear medium by manipulating the degree of coherent mixing. The highest efficiency and resonant enhancement of the frequency conversion could be obtained if the three fields are strong, their coherent mixing is negligible, and the differences of the corresponding Rabi frequencies are small. If these differences are large, the conversion efficiency is maximized if the coherent mixing is maximized too. For a spin multiplet, the resonant enhancements of three-field mixing processes have strong temperature dependences and exhibit maximum values at optimum temperatures that are relatively high. Although the discussion is applied to a spin multiplet, it can also be extended to the general case of multilevel atomic systems.Frequency conversion techniques using nonlinear media have been extensively investigated theoretically and experimentally in the past decades. Traditional nonlinear frequency conversion processes in gases and vapours are characterized by relatively poor conversion efficiencies due to the small magnitude of the third-order nonlinear susceptibility. In 1990, Harris et al. [1] proposed an idea to overcome this trade-off problem. They have shown theoretically that, by strongly coupling a metastable state and an upper state of a resonant transition, the nonlinear susceptibility can be resonantly enhanced through constructive interference, while the linear susceptibility is strongly reduced through destructive interference. This process is termed electromagnetically induced transparency (EIT). EIT is a technique for eliminating the effect of a medium on a propagating beam of electromagnetic radiation. The EIT phenomena may also