<p>How should I write a thank you letter to my interviewer and what should I include?</p>
<p>are you guys all writing thank you letters?</p>
<p>i didnt…</p>
<p>i do to all of my interviews.
i feel kind of weird just leaving it hanging, but that’s just me!</p>
<p>I just make mine all short little thank-you notes. Two or three lines at most.</p>
<p>it’s protocol to write a thank you letter.</p>
<p>Dear Mr/Ms/Dr. _________,</p>
<p>Thank you for meeting with me today. I really enjoyed hearing about _________ and was rather impressed with ________. I hope you enjoyed my company as much as I enjoyed yours.</p>
<p>Sincerely,</p>
<hr>
<hr>
<p>how hard can it be?</p>
<p>I just sent an email expressing my thanks for his time and for providing useful advice/experiences. It was a just a paragraph.</p>
<p>Basically just thank the interviewer for his time and mention a few brief points that stood out to you or was eye-opening during the interview. So it’s not just a “Hi, thanks for the interview, bye,” type of letter.</p>
<p>Hi,</p>
<p>Thanks very much for this comment. It help me to think about my ideals.</p>
<p>Tks again and pls keep posting.</p>
<p>It’s a thank-you letter, not a marriage proposal, just write that you’re thankful as the interviewer took time to interview you and give you an opportunity to tell more about yourself, and telling useful advice/experiences, just wht CuteAccountant said above.</p>
<p>Always, always write a thank you letter. I really think it shows you care about the school. In all of mine I wrote about specifics the interviewer hit. If we had something in common I mentioned it. For one of my interview thank you notes, I even included a link to my favorite restaurant, as we talked about food for a while :D</p>
<p>Also, its always great to write thank-you letters/notes for all of your interviews. It shows that it’s not just out of courtesy, but that you have a humble personality, anyone will be happy to see that the interviews they conduct are appreciated by someone. :)</p>
<p>I wrote one. I don’t see any harm in NOT writing one.</p>
<p>I only did for one. For all the others, I had thanked them at the end of the interview and the way we left it made me feel a thank you letter would be gratuitous.</p>
<p>^I didn’t write one because for me it seemed superfluous. I said thank-you in person.</p>
<p>I completely agree with UVAorBust. I think a thank you note (especially a handwritten one) can go a long way. When I went to a UChicago admitted student reception, I met my interviewer and the first thing he did was thank me for the thank you letter I mailed to his office. His wife later told my parents that I was the only applicant from the EA pool that sent a handwritten thank you note. With college decisions being so random these days, the little things do matter.</p>