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Post Visit Etiquette
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2016 3:42 pm
by MichiganMan87
What are your thoughts on saying thank you to those who you spoke with during a law school visit? An email to the dean of admissions? Email to all of those that you met? Handwritten card to the any of the above?
Re: Post Visit Etiquette
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2016 3:53 pm
by R. Jeeves
MichiganMan87 wrote:What are your thoughts on saying thank you to those who you spoke with during a law school visit? An email to the dean of admissions? Email to all of those that you met? Handwritten card to the any of the above?
I don't think any of this is necessary or even helpful. Don't worry about this stuff.
Re: Post Visit Etiquette
Posted: Thu Jan 28, 2016 10:09 pm
by Aeon
MichiganMan87 wrote:What are your thoughts on saying thank you to those who you spoke with during a law school visit? An email to the dean of admissions? Email to all of those that you met? Handwritten card to the any of the above?
Unless there are unusual circumstances (i.e.: they helped you with a thorny issue or something major like that), etiquette does not dictate that a follow-up message is necessary. In other cases, if tastefully done, I don't think it would be harmful but certainly not expected or required.
Re: Post Visit Etiquette
Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2016 3:58 pm
by teamlam
Not too sure what the point of this would be?
Re: Post Visit Etiquette
Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2016 4:53 pm
by pterodactyls
If I had a scheduled in-person interview, I would consider sending a hand-written thank you note (though it may not be totally necessary).
But other than an in-person interview, I think it'd be a bit overkill barring any extreme circumstances.
Re: Post Visit Etiquette
Posted: Sun Mar 06, 2016 6:38 pm
by Troianii
MichiganMan87 wrote:What are your thoughts on saying thank you to those who you spoke with during a law school visit? An email to the dean of admissions? Email to all of those that you met? Handwritten card to the any of the above?
it's a good thing to do and I would recommend it. Writing a thank you note puts your name in someone's head again - a handwritten thank you note is just that much more meaningful because no one really does it anymore. Just think about the reverse side - when you first started getting acceptance letters which made you feel best - the generic letters, or the phone call or handwritten notes of congratulations?
this delves more into marketing techniques. I took a class in marketing and some study we looked at showed that handwritten thank you letters are very effective, and that people who wrote them were more likely to be hired (in this case, it was thank you notes following job interviews). This isn't the same thing, but the same generalities apply - people like receiving handwritten letters, and it stands out, despite how little effort it actually takes. If nothing else, it means that they think about your name a little more.
But, of course, don't expect anything from it. It's really just the nice thing to do. No one expects it.