ALWAYS, send a follow up email or thank you note. Just make sure it has no typos, keep it short, and relevant to the interviews. I've had hiring managers tell me they loved a candidate but we're disappointed that there was no follow-up or thank you.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I don't expect a response and realize they will pick the strongest fit, however the person who left the position only lasted a year and I'd like to emphasize that I' m willing to commit for much longer than that because I really admire this company's work. If any of the other applicants match my skill/expertise level, I was thinking a brief email about my level of commitment might help, but I don't want to seem annoying either.
Anonymous wrote:The point of the thank you email is not merely to say thanks. Yes, do that, but really it's to reiterate why you're interested in the position and to highlight something you didn't have time to discuss in greater detail during the interview.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, I don't expect a response and realize they will pick the strongest fit, however the person who left the position only lasted a year and I'd like to emphasize that I' m willing to commit for much longer than that because I really admire this company's work. If any of the other applicants match my skill/expertise level, I was thinking a brief email about my level of commitment might help, but I don't want to seem annoying either.
Anonymous wrote:I've extremely rarely ever received a response from a thank you email that I sent.
Anonymous wrote:I recently landed a stretch job and I think a lot of it had to do with the thank you email I sent. I knew what my weakness was in my interview and without mentioning it said something along the lines of how the new job would fix that weakness. Got an email back from her saying shed sent my info to HR to start the hiring process. And I mean this job was a huge stretch.