Anonymous wrote:I've always gotten an email back. I've gotten great responses to hand written thank you's. I typically write them in the car and drop them at the post office nearest the office so they get it the next day or two. They usually mention it when I get called back or when I come in.
Anonymous wrote:
I had a phone interview, sent a thank you email and haven't heard anything back. My skills are in high demand on the job market, so his lack of response impacted my willingness to work for him as a boss. When their HR person called me back to invite for an office interview, I politely declined the invitation. If you, hiring managers, are interested in a candidate, you better reply to his/her emails.
If you were otherwise interested in the job, this is ridiculous. Why would you expect all hiring managers to send a thank you to a thank you? I work in the nonprofit sector where projects do a lot of their own hiring because we have tiny HR departments. If I spent all my time replying to thank you emails from potential candidates, I'd be wasting a lot of time in which I'm actually supposed to be doing something else (I am not HR and hiring is not part of my job description). Reviewing applications and conducting interviews is already hugely time consuming. It doesn't mean that I don't care about responding to job applicants, and I follow up with them once I have news to share regarding a next step or a rejection. But why do I need to write back to a note that says "thanks for the interview" if I have nothing to say?
Applying for jobs is hard, but too few applicants these days seem aware that the world does not revolve around their job search (I am in the middle of two applicant searches right now and it has been a pain--especially for the more junior position). I think it behooves both job seekers and hiring managers to occasionally put themselves in the others' shoes.
I probably wasn't interested enough and am also used to receiving replies to my emails. I interviewed with the Big4 consulting firms, and though their consultants work very long hours, 90% of them did reply to my thank you emails. I myself always reply to such emails. It should be quite easy to write a template of the response and copy-paste it into the emails to the candidates, just updating the names. The template can even be shown to and approved by HR - for those who are concerned about saying something the company wouldn't approve.Anonymous wrote:
If you were otherwise interested in the job, this is ridiculous. Why would you expect all hiring managers to send a thank you to a thank you? I work in the nonprofit sector where projects do a lot of their own hiring because we have tiny HR departments. If I spent all my time replying to thank you emails from potential candidates, I'd be wasting a lot of time in which I'm actually supposed to be doing something else (I am not HR and hiring is not part of my job description).
Anonymous wrote:I had a phone interview, sent a thank you email and haven't heard anything back. My skills are in high demand on the job market, so his lack of response impacted my willingness to work for him as a boss. When their HR person called me back to invite for an office interview, I politely declined the invitation. If you, hiring managers, are interested in a candidate, you better reply to his/her emails.
Anonymous wrote:I interview a lot, but I don't usually respond to these because hiring is out of my hands after I submit my initial responses, and so I don't want to do anything contradictory. It means nothing about the candidate.