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Thank you notes
Posted: Sat Feb 12, 2011 4:16 pm
by PirateCap'n
I've already decided on emailing my "thank you" notes (because I have exceptionally horrible handwriting). I met with probably a dozen attorneys plus the office manager. The office manager set up the meetings and was really my "go to" person for the whole thing, and a couple of the attorneys really spoke to me and dealt with me more than the others (one took me to lunch). Question is this: would it be appropriate to email the office manager to thank her and ask her to extend my thank yous while at the same time emailing the two attorneys that I dealt with and thanking them too (this is my preference), or should I just email the office manager and leave it at that?
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 11:20 am
by PirateCap'n
One bump.
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 12:50 pm
by non sequitur
I would thank as many relevant people as possible. Doing so cannot hurt your chances.
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 1:03 pm
by thesealocust
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 1:53 pm
by DallasCowboy
Thank you notes: Many of you have asked about thank you notes . . . Thank yous after callbacks are a nice touch, but you should only do them if you can be sure that they will be absolutely perfect. Thus, if you don't have the time or focus to devote to them, skip them. Many recruiters and hiring partners think they are a bad idea because of the high rate of mistakes. If you do them, the rule is to send to everyone that you touch in the process. Each should be different. Handwritten or electronic are both fine.
lulz
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 2:15 pm
by PirateCap'n
thesealocust wrote:
Consensus is that there's no consensus.
Here's a direct quote from our career service's office (yours, undoubtedly, has a different opinion):
Thank you notes: Many of you have asked about thank you notes . . . Thank yous after callbacks are a nice touch, but you should only do them if you can be sure that they will be absolutely perfect. Thus, if you don't have the time or focus to devote to them, skip them. Many recruiters and hiring partners think they are a bad idea because of the high rate of mistakes. If you do them, the rule is to send to everyone that you touch in the process. Each should be different. Handwritten or electronic are both fine.
Yeah. I had actually searched for it before, but I think mine was a bit more specific than most of the ones I had found. I know there's really no consensus, but I just didn't want to irk the folks that I didn't thank individually if I thanked some individually and others through the office manager.
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 2:28 pm
by sullidop
Saying thank you to the office manager is fine if they were overly accommodating in the process, but I'd advise against it for the attorneys unless you have something to say to them. That you were really impressed with the firm and liked what you saw is not surprising.
For example, the one time I emailed a thank you to an attorney from a call back resulted from a conversation about classes his kids should take at my undergrad school; I emailed him an updated list with course numbers and thanked him for his time. I did not email any of the other attorneys.
Re: Thank you notes
Posted: Sun Feb 13, 2011 3:08 pm
by holdencaulfield
I had a similar situation where I had a primary contact (one of the partners) but interviewed with about 12 attorneys during my second interview. I just emailed the primary contact and asked him to extend my thanks to his partners and the other attorneys I met with.
I got the job. So, whatever that means.