Most Viewed Advice
- Do job seekers care about an employer's brand?
- Career In Information Technology
- Hating Your Job Might Be Making You Sick
- How To Talk About Your Biggest Weaknesses In A Job Interview
- What does your CV say about you?
- How to answer the job interview question, ‘What is your biggest regret and why?’
- 15 Ways to win at job interviews
- "Where do you see yourself 5 years from now?"
- Here’s the kind of training millennials need to get ahead in 2017
Job interview thank you: Is it better to send a letter or email?
Job search etiquette is clear on one thing: Every interview should be followed promptly by a thank you note.
Job interview thank you: Is it better to send a letter or email?
Job search etiquette is clear on one thing: Every interview should be followed promptly by a thank you note.
But should your interview thank you come in the form of a typed email or handwritten letter? That’s where things get a bit nebulous.
The most important thing is not whether you follow up with email or handwritten paper, but whether you follow up at all, Missing that opportunity is more of a problem than choosing the medium is.
That said, there are advantages and disadvantages to both. Let these criteria be your guide.
Email Etiquette
This chapter sets out steps to help you manage the time you spend dealing with e-mail so that you can get on with other tasks. It offers help on prioritising those incoming messages and deciding how quickly you need to respond. It tells you how to file e-mail according to its value or function and encourages you to clear the inbox regularly. Despite your best efforts, unsolicited e-mail or spam can clutter up the most organised inbox and infect your computer system with viruses, so this section gives guidance on protecting yourself. It also offers alternatives to e-mail that offer the same benefits of speed, convenience, and effectiveness.
Step one: Prioritise incoming messages
If you are regularly faced with a large volume of incoming messages, you need to prioritise your inbox—identify which e-mails are really important.
- Check the names of the senders. Were you expecting or hoping to hear from them? How quickly do you need to deal with particular individuals?
- Check the subject. Is it an urgent issue or just information? Is it about an issue that falls within your sphere or responsibility, or is it something that should just be forwarded to someone else?
- Check the priority given by the senders. Do they really mean it’s urgent? Remember that some people have a tendency to mark all of their messages ‘important’, even if they’re anything but.
- Is it obvious spam? Can it be deleted without reading?
- Check the time of the message. Has it been in your inbox a long time?
An initial scan like this can help you identify the e-mails that need your immediate attention. The others can be kept for reading at a more convenient time.
Step two: Reply in stages
Because e-mail is an ‘instant’ medium, it can be tempting to reply immediately but that might not always be necessary. You can reply in stages, with a brief acknowledgement and a more detailed follow-up. If you do this, give the recipient an indication of when you’ll be able to get back to him or her and try to keep to this deadline wherever possible.
- If the e-mail simply requires a brief, one line answer then by all means reply immediately. For example, if all you need to say is, ‘Yes, I can make the 10.00 meeting’, or ‘Thanks, that’s just the information I needed’, do it.
- If you are unable to reply there and then or choose not to, let the sender know that you’ve received the message and will be in touch as soon as possible. This is a useful method of dealing with a query when:
- you need to get further information before replying in full
- it relates to a relatively complex issue so you need time to consider your response, rather than giving a rushed answer
- you are angry, upset, frustrated, or confused about a message you’ve received and need a ‘cooling-off’ period before you make a considered response
TOP TIP
Taking a staged approach is useful as it allows you to maintain contact while not interrupting other work that may be more important. It also gives you a bit of breathing space if you are feeling under pressure or worried about the issue under discussion.