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-   -   US post interview etiquette (https://britishexpats.com/forum/usa-57/us-post-interview-etiquette-903990/)

MsElui Sep 29th 2017 4:12 am

US post interview etiquette
 
Asking for a friend :P

I know the way its done here is to send a thank you note after a job interview, but man o man i struggle with this concept. NOT the Brit way at all.

what do you guys normally say?

Also in 'the friends particular case' they do not have direct contact details of the two interviewers - only the recruiter who organized the interview. Do you send it via the recruiter in that kind of scenario.

Also - 2nd interview was late yesterday (first interview was by phone earlier this week). Before anything can be sent today - the recruiter has already been in touch to book the third and final interview with these people's boss/director. Should they send in an email to the 2 people anyway - even though the 3rd interview is booked? :starsmile:

any advice gladly accepted :fingerscrossed:

MidAtlantic Sep 29th 2017 4:33 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 

Originally Posted by MsElui (Post 12349938)
I know the way its done here is to send a thank you note after a job interview, but man o man i struggle with this concept. NOT the Brit way at all.

I am not sure it is "the way it's done here". I have never done it and never known anyone else to do it.

I will be interested in the experience of others.

Giantaxe Sep 29th 2017 4:48 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 

Originally Posted by MidAtlantic (Post 12349953)
I am not sure it is "the way it's done here". I have never done it and never known anyone else to do it.

I will be interested in the experience of others.

I've never done this. I have received a number of such notes when on the interviewer side of the fence and I just binned them. They certainly made zero difference to my thoughts on the candidates.

Mercury39 Sep 29th 2017 4:49 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
Over the last 12 months I done on average 5 interviews a week (so seems like a good sample set) I get thank you emails occasionally (less than 5%), often passed on by the recruiter as the candidate raley knows my email. These are high tech sales roles. So my experience, it's not that common. I will say I like getting them, seems professional and courteous.

Pulaski Sep 29th 2017 4:52 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 

Originally Posted by MidAtlantic (Post 12349953)
I am not sure it is "the way it's done here". I have never done it and never known anyone else to do it.

I will be interested in the experience of others.

When I conduct interviews for my team I get follow-up emails from 30%-50% of interviewees. Most applicants are internal, so I am not sure if that makes a difference.

Anyway, I ignore all the e-mails, often not even opening them. I can't imagine when it would ever make a difference, though I suppose there's no harm in sending one.

mrken30 Sep 29th 2017 5:01 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
I remember getting one email from a candidate. He was a potential candidate before I got this begging email. He did not get the job. With the possibility to make cultural mistakes, I would probably not send a follow up letter/email.

md95065 Sep 29th 2017 5:12 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
In my experience this is not common at all.

Over the years I have received a very small handful of notes like this out of many hundreds of interviews. IMHO it is neither necessary or expected.

fbf2006 Sep 29th 2017 5:17 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
I guess it is not as common as I thought it was. Going to college and grad school here and from reading professional advice, it is usually suggested. Just a simple thank you for taking out the time to interview me and maybe a sentence indicating your continued interest. That's it. I mean, most of the interviewers have been trained in the US right so I'll discount what most people say on here.


Just google for examples.

SpoogleDrummer Sep 29th 2017 5:17 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
I would only expect a thank you after I've told the person they're not getting the job, anything before the decision can and will be held against them as I don't like kiss arses, I need people that will tell me I'm wrong if I'm wrong (working on the theory that me being wrong is a possibility).

kateinbrooklyn Sep 29th 2017 5:23 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
I hire for my company and after an interview I would expect an email thanking me for my time and expressing further interest in the position. Almost all candidates do send a short email.

Pulaski Sep 29th 2017 5:29 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 

Originally Posted by fbf2006 (Post 12349982)
..... I mean, most of the interviewers have been trained in the US right so I'll discount what most people say on here.

Not sure what you mean by that? :unsure:

I never had hire-and-fire authority in the UK, and I have been trained on my employer's hiring procedures by HR here in the US - which means strictly using information from the resume and interview, when I am given a fixed list of questions to ask. If HR thought that an email had influenced my decision on who to hire they'd come down on me like a ton of bricks! :eek: ..... Which is precisely why I ignore any emails I get from interviewees. :nod:

mrken30 Sep 29th 2017 5:32 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
My boss who trained me came from MA. Maybe it's an industry thing. People are hired on their merits, not what they put in an email. Most hiring managers have a very busy inbox and probably don't have time to read the emails.

I received one email from a total of about 15 candidates. Most of those candidates were US natives.

fbf2006 Sep 29th 2017 5:39 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
You're not hired based on the email. it is what it is. That's the professional advice I've mostly been given. I had an interview a couple of months ago and the recruiter (an external one) reminded me to send a thank you note.
I have a very busy inbox but loathe unread emails. I somehow manage to skim each and every one of them.

fbf2006 Sep 29th 2017 5:43 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 

Originally Posted by Pulaski (Post 12349988)
Not sure what you mean by that? :unsure:

I never had hire-and-fire authority in the UK, and I have been trained on my employer's hiring procedures by HR here in the US - which means strictly using information from the resume and interview, when I am given a fixed list of questions to ask. If HR thought that an email had influenced my decision on who to hire they'd come down on me like a ton of bricks! :eek: ..... Which is precisely why I ignore any emails I get from interviewees. :nod:


I just mean that since we're in the US, most of the interviewers are from the US and might thus expect thank you emails. It might be industry based, location based, who knows. Your hiring decision would obviously not be based solely on the note. What 'they' sometimes say is that you might be on par with a couple of other candidates and the courtesy of the thank you email could nudge you forward.

Zoe Bell Sep 29th 2017 7:14 am

Re: US post interview etiquette
 
this is a really good website for job related stuff
Ask a Manager


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