<p>I know you're supposed to send a thank you note to your alumna interviewer, but mine didn't give me any kind of mailing address. Should I send her a thank you e-mail? For some reason that seems a bit awkward or strange to me...probably just my social paranoia kicking in.</p>
<p>No need to send a thank you note.</p>
<p>I disagree, its classy to send a thank you. And email is perfectly fine for sending said note.</p>
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<p>100% disagree, a thank you note (thank you email will do fine) is almost mandatory. It can have an actual impact on your interviewer’s evaluation - remember the interview report is being written after the interview and often many days after the interview, so the report comes from just an impression of you.</p>
<p>A good thank you note will sound genuine, not be too long and touch on a few specifics in the interview. Most times it won’t make a difference, but sometimes if you pick a particular moment that the interviewer connected with, then it can help. Conversely if the interviewer notices that all his/her other interviewees send him/her a thank you email except for you, then you might get a worse evaluation. </p>
<p>Some people (not me) see it as basic courtesy, because the alumni is volunteering their time to help out admissions and by extension giving you a chance to share more information and bolster your app.</p>
<p>I would like my son to send a thank you note to his interviewer, but unfortunately, he only has her cell phone number.</p>
<p>Ok I believe you. Will advise the daughter to send one. It’s not too late the interview was yesterday.</p>