Sunday, May 17, 2020
The Case Against the Handwritten Thank You Note
The Case Against the Handwritten Thank You Note Yes â" you read that right. Iâm not sure you should send a handwritten thank you after your interview. I know that the formal thank you note has been the gold standard for classy candidates for the past several decades, but like the phone book, I think of it as an idea whose time may have passed. Here are 5 reasons why. Embed from Getty Imageswindow.gie=window.gie||function(c){(gie.q=gie.q||[]).push(c)};gie(function(){gie.widgets.load({id:'gZRv4gz8S7JTK7jCNYNNtQ',sig:'fWbSs7Q7E2GRmvDaewBzu9UqQG_0cia1EEqagAYBj6g=',w:'414px',h:'414px',items:'468764755',caption: false ,tld:'com',is360: false })}); If youâre a mature jobseeker, one of your personal branding priorities should be to impress the company with your comfort with technology. The reason a handwritten note stands out is that itâs an analog gesture in a digital world. If youâre worried in any way that your skills may be perceived as out of date, perhaps an email would position you as more tech-savvy. I donât know about you, but my handwriting does not reflect my inner calligrapher. My handwriting slants upward at about a 60-degree angle and makes every note look lopsided. The reader may think Iâm optimistic if sheâs a fan of handwriting analysis, or she may just think it looks sloppy. I tend to think faster than I can write legibly, so it would take me three or four attempts at copying over my note to make it perfectly neat and legible. I would rather spend my time crafting great email content than copying my sentences over and over like Bart Simpson at the blackboard. Unlike notes, emails can be shared at the click of a key. That means that the recruiter can forward your comments to the other decision makers in the process. Your thank you email should always contain some insights you gained from the interview and reiterate how interested you are in the position â" itâs also your chance to revisit how your skills and experience are a match for the job. With email, you have the advantage of spelling and grammar checks. (Of course you always have that feature enabled, donât you?) Youâll be much less likely to make an error in an email than if you rely on your own proofreading skills. And, you can clean up a mistake with a couple of keystrokes instead of starting over on a new notecard. (See #2 above.) You can add attachments to your email. You can send a link to an industry article you mentioned in the interview, or add references or a writing sample that was requested by the company. You can link to your LinkedIn profile or an organization where you volunteer. The digital possibilities are endless. For all these reasons, it may be time to switch to email. If it doesnât feel old school enough to impress an employer, remember that the first email was sent in 1971. That makes it 44-year-old technology â"older than the fax machine (invented in 1980.) Unlike the fax machine, email is still an acceptable business practice. Drop the pen and nobody gets hurt.
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