Anonymous wrote:Re: thank you notes - most of my interviews have been set up through the recruiter, and I've asked for email addresses thank interviewers, and have only ONCE received those email addresses from the recruiter (a few, I've been referred in by former colleagues and have obtained email addresses that way). If people are wondering why I haven't thanked them, they can blame the recruiter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't do thank-you notes because a job interview is not a one-sided expression of generosity. The company wants an employee and the employee wants a job. Under ideal circumstances, both wants are fulfilled. i've nver had a company send me a thank-you note for interviewing with them, so I see no reason to send them as a candidate.
It’s to show them that you’re interested in the job, even after the interview. It shows YOU are not one-sided and provides an additional method of demonstrating writing skill.
My manager lost a few candidates because the nature of the job - tedious and high attention to detail. So he didn’t follow up with the candidates who didn’t write thank you letters because he assumed they won’t be interested.
My manager lost a few candidates because the nature of the job - tedious and high attention to detail. So he didn’t follow up with the candidates who didn’t write thank you letters because he assumed they won’t be interested.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't do thank-you notes because a job interview is not a one-sided expression of generosity. The company wants an employee and the employee wants a job. Under ideal circumstances, both wants are fulfilled. i've nver had a company send me a thank-you note for interviewing with them, so I see no reason to send them as a candidate.
It’s to show them that you’re interested in the job, even after the interview. It shows YOU are not one-sided and provides an additional method of demonstrating writing skill.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't do thank-you notes because a job interview is not a one-sided expression of generosity. The company wants an employee and the employee wants a job. Under ideal circumstances, both wants are fulfilled. i've nver had a company send me a thank-you note for interviewing with them, so I see no reason to send them as a candidate.