Lerxst
Well-known member
- MBTI
- INFJ
Maybe I'm over-thinking this or maybe I've hit a string of bad luck... I don't know. Anytime I send follow-ups to potential employers after an interview, I seem to either eat my own words, ramble on to a person that could care less, or fall victim to bad luck.
One recent occasion, I sent multiple follow-ups after they said they would call back. I was tactful, but wonder after-the-fact if I didn't come off as sounding desperate. The nail in the coffin was their rejection letter the following week. So after all of the effort, I was still rejected and most likely sent all of that information to a person that didn't care one way or another about reading it.
Another interview went well, but they got flooded out by the hurricane that hit the East Coast. They were also a part of the power outage that meant about 2 weeks without any form of communication from them. I must have left 2 messages and sent a couple more emails during that period of dead silence from them, only to get a response that they chose someone else afterwards.
Just recently I ate my own words when I sent a follow-up question/thank you letter in which I asked about emergency preparedness for the site (in a remote location) and they just got hit with 2 feet of snow the following day. Still haven't heard anything back. Wondering if that e-mail would either help or hinder my chances there now.
I know proper etiquette says you're supposed to send these "thank you's" and follow-up with the employer after the fact, but I'm seriously questioning if they can hurt you as much as they can help you in some situations.
One recent occasion, I sent multiple follow-ups after they said they would call back. I was tactful, but wonder after-the-fact if I didn't come off as sounding desperate. The nail in the coffin was their rejection letter the following week. So after all of the effort, I was still rejected and most likely sent all of that information to a person that didn't care one way or another about reading it.
Another interview went well, but they got flooded out by the hurricane that hit the East Coast. They were also a part of the power outage that meant about 2 weeks without any form of communication from them. I must have left 2 messages and sent a couple more emails during that period of dead silence from them, only to get a response that they chose someone else afterwards.
Just recently I ate my own words when I sent a follow-up question/thank you letter in which I asked about emergency preparedness for the site (in a remote location) and they just got hit with 2 feet of snow the following day. Still haven't heard anything back. Wondering if that e-mail would either help or hinder my chances there now.
I know proper etiquette says you're supposed to send these "thank you's" and follow-up with the employer after the fact, but I'm seriously questioning if they can hurt you as much as they can help you in some situations.