Thank you letter

<p>Did anyone send a thank you letter to their interviewer?</p>

<p>I'm thinking about it, although I realize I just have the phone number yet not the address...</p>

<p>Do it. As soon after the interview as possible.</p>

<p>I only have my interviewer's name and phone number. My interview was at his house so I have is home address as well. I want to write a thank you note, but I'm not sure if he uses is home address as his mailing address (or if he has a po box instead). I think it might be awkward to call and ask him. Is there another way I could find out his mailing address... like through Harvard or something?</p>

<p>well if he has a house... mail can be delivered to it</p>

<p>Clearly. Thanks for that. You're so helpful.</p>

<p>My home address isn't my mailing address so we never check our mailbox... really, like never. I guess I'm a special case, but if my interviewer's a special case too, my question still remains.</p>

<p>Really really doubtful your interviewer would not recieve mail at the house...the post office would try anyway if the address was there....in post office land, they go by address and try and get it there, remember, neither rain, sleet, bad handwriting, will stop the mail</p>

<p>my Penn interviewer only gave me his cell phone #....so i thanked him very much during the interview - but had no real way to write him a thank you card. I asked for a business card, but he didn't have one. My counselor said it'd be ok...of course....my counselor is an idiot.</p>

<p>my interviewer gave me his email so thats what I did :)</p>

<p>Mine was also e-mail....should I just e-mail a thank you note? ...or is that too impersonal?</p>

<p>"well if he has a house... mail can be delivered to it"</p>

<p>hahahaha! The logical genius of Harvard applicants...</p>

<p>I didnt follow up with a thank you note because the interview was in his office and I didnt get the impression that his secretary would pass on my inconsequential little thank you note to him...</p>

<p>The secreatary would have given them the card, thats the job, and thank you notes are so rare, it stands out, promise. (I hope you all aren't business majors)...And what would it have hurt to send a card, jeesh, takes 5 minutes, and the good will that could be created is immeasurable...one day this person could be doing hiring, could be a mentor, could have some influence in your life, (yes the world is that small), and if you have done something extra, it will never never never hurt you!!!!</p>