<p>I had interviews with alumnis recently.
They didn't give me their business cards and when I asked for them for one one time, alumni didn't have it with her. </p>
<p>Should I still write thank-you cards through email?</p>
<p>I had interviews with alumnis recently.
They didn't give me their business cards and when I asked for them for one one time, alumni didn't have it with her. </p>
<p>Should I still write thank-you cards through email?</p>
<p>Yes. They did you a favor, and sending them some kind of thank-you -- through e-mail or regular male -- is appropriate.</p>
<p>I usually do a report on the student I interview right away, so if they send me a thank you note, it wouldn't affect what I say (kids who are polite enough to send thank you notes are polite enough to get a good write up anyway!) But I love getting thank you notes. It never occurred to me to give an interviewee my business card; I think I wouldn't because in my particular case it might look like I was fishing for clients.</p>
<p>Yes...it's always good to thank the interviewer for his/her. I know they say 2 weeks is an acceptable window for sending a letter...but I try to do it within 2-3 days.</p>
<p>I only talked to one of my interviewers over the phone before the interview, and he didn't give me a business card or email address, so the only method I have of thanking him is by calling the number on the caller ID. This does not seem very appropriate, but I want to send a thank you. What would be the best way to do this?</p>
<p>You always could send a thank-you c/o the college's alumni office. And, of course, you could check the phone book and switchboard.com to see if the person's home address or business address is listed.</p>
<p>I sent my brown interview a follow-up thank you email, and wished them a happy holidays. (It was within a week of Christmas).</p>