expressing willingness to learn without looking desperate
Posted: Thu May 31, 2018 3:00 pm
Anon because the interviewer might read this forum.
I had an interview for a job that I reaally want. It is a practice area that I do not have experience in. The interviewer said that they don't require prior experience in this area of law, as long as the person is willing to work hard to learn it.
I am now going to write a thank you/follow-up email after the interview. I want to do whatever I can to boost my chances because I really do want this job and really am willing to work extra hard, I would even put in extra hours in my spare time to learn the ropes.
I was thinking I could try to express this in the email ... so that they know they can count on me to actually work hard to learn this stuff. On TV Shows the character always says something cheesy like "I promise you can count on me to work really hard, etc" .. is that too cheesy for real life?
What's a good way to express this to them without sounding cheesy or desperate?
I had an interview for a job that I reaally want. It is a practice area that I do not have experience in. The interviewer said that they don't require prior experience in this area of law, as long as the person is willing to work hard to learn it.
I am now going to write a thank you/follow-up email after the interview. I want to do whatever I can to boost my chances because I really do want this job and really am willing to work extra hard, I would even put in extra hours in my spare time to learn the ropes.
I was thinking I could try to express this in the email ... so that they know they can count on me to actually work hard to learn this stuff. On TV Shows the character always says something cheesy like "I promise you can count on me to work really hard, etc" .. is that too cheesy for real life?
What's a good way to express this to them without sounding cheesy or desperate?