5 Ways to Screw Up After the Interview

Make a blunder in your job interview follow-up, and you may not get the job.

By Liz Wolgemuth

Posted: March 5, 2009

If a company really wants you on the payroll, a manager will probably make you an offer. You might forget a seemingly crucial element the morning of your job interview—deodorant, for example—but if they really want you and your knack for, say, recruiting the best talent or finding major energy cost savings, they'll likely overlook it.

Trouble is, most candidates don't have that luxury. When you walk into an interview, there's a good chance this hiring manager doesn't know if you're the right person for the job yet, and when you walk out of that interview, he or she may still be unsure. That means, your follow-up communication can make a difference.

Here are five ways you could blow the post-interview period, and some advice on how to get your follow-up right:

You don't send a thank-you note: You have no doubt heard this advice before, but lots of people still don't do it. If you think you've got the job, you might think a thank-you note is unnecessary or even obsequious. If you're sure you bombed your interview, then you may think any follow-up effort is a waste of your time—or just another opportunity to mess up. That's not the case. "The biggest mistake is not following up," says Adrian Klaphaak, a career and life coach in San Francisco's Bay area.

An E-mail is better than nothing, but a handwritten note can set you apart from other candidates. Use a simple, relatively formal style of card. (Cards with closeups of flowers or cute animals are for friends.)  "Handwritten letters are powerful because no one sends them anymore," says Erik Folgate, a blogger at Brazen Careerist. Folgate recently blogged that in his own job search, hiring managers have responded favorably when he's followed up. 

Your thank-you note is too long: What's one thing that will make for a bad thank-you note? "Lack of brevity," says human resources executive Kris Dunn, who also blogs at The HR Capitalist. This is not intended to be an epic work. As Dunn puts it: "You're in and you're out and then you're done with it." A rambling note wastes the hiring manager's time, and it can suggest that you lack the confidence of conciseness.

Your thank-you note is too general: Specificity is as important as brevity, Dunn says. Your notes shouldn't read as though they could be reproduced for every interview. "I want at least one thing in the thank-you note that connects the interviewer with something we talked about in the interview and shows they were paying attention," Dunn says. 

You try to apologize for an interview mistake: If you think you answered a question poorly in an interview, go back to the issue before the interview is over. You might say: "You know, I quickly want to go back to something I said earlier in response to your question about X. I'd like to clarify my answer." Don't wait until the interview is over and use your thank-you note to redress the mistake, Dunn says. You run a real risk of turning the note into a lengthy and meandering foray into something the interviewer may never have noticed or has already forgotten.

You harass the manager: It's frustrating and worrisome to be looking for work in a market with millions of competitors and a scarcity of openings. Hiring freezes and shifting corporate strategies can make human resources departments change their hiring plans in no time. You might have a great interview and then hear nothing back. You will not, however, improve your case by bombarding the hiring manager with telephone calls and voicemail messages (or hangups), E-mails, Facebook messages, faxes, Twitters, and other multitudinous possible methods of communication. Klaphaak recommends patience after sending a thank you: "remember that an employer who wants to hire you will almost always contact you."

Wayne of GA must work at a tiny little company...

The previous reader, Wayne of GA, commented,

"Only people that DON'T get hired have to send a thank you note. Those that get hire will be called later that day with the offer."

I work in a huge well-known international company in Los Angles, and I can guarantee anyone reading this that there has never been an occupant that has been offered a job the same day they were interviewed. In many circumstances it can be many weeks (I have seen as many as 7) before the interviewed candidate was notified of a job offer.

A thank you note is always a great idea, especially in a large company like mine. When a manager interviews over fifteen people for a single position they can all start to blur together and the follow-up thank you note helps keep your name fresh in the manager's mind. Moreover, Managers in a large corporate company will appreciate and accept more formal business etiquette such as thank you notes.

Jessica of CA @ Oct 21, 2009 19:56:56 PM

Thank you emails

Personally, an email thanking the person interviewing you for taking the time to interview you shows an added interest in the position. I don't think its a negative reflection. It's sets you apart from the others that interview.

There have been plenty of people who have never sent a follow-up email, note or thank you email or note and have still been offered the position. But I would estimate that you could at least double that number for those that have sent some kind of follow-up respose and got the job because of it. And not because they were not honest in the interview, but because the went out of their way to show the interviewer they are still interested in the job.

The time to send the follow up letter is NOT three days later, its within a couple hours after the interview or the next day, NO LATER.

Of course you must keep it short and precise. Emphasize you are still interested in the position and be honest, don't fake it. BE PREPARED TO BACKUP ALL THAT YOU SAY IN THE INTERVIEW AND THANK YOU LETTER if you get the job.

Only in ONE instance have I received a job offer and/or job without sending a follow-up email or letter, and that was my very first job during high school. Every other position offer or job has been with a follow up email. I can't say that was the primary reason for being offered the job, but I GUARANTEE it helped.

But that's just me.

Matt of CA @ Sep 10, 2009 03:00:12 AM

Thank Yous are not for me

I agree wholeheartedly with Wayne of GA. I've always had very good instincts for whether or not I got the job after an interview. Never once sent a thank you note in my history of working and always was right about getting the job. To me, the idea of sending a thank you note is phony and dumb and makes me feel like i am coming across as brown-nosing. That's just not me. I think if I were on the hiring end, it would be almost a turnoff to get a thank you note. It just seems automated and fake. If they want to hire me, they will hire me based on my interview, not on whether or not i send a thank you. I already thank them at the end of the interview for their time and consideration. No need to prolong it. In this current economic crisis we are in, I had an interview recently that I was sure I aced. Out of pressure from people like this who wrote this article, I decided to try sending a thank you email right after my interview. I kept it short and concise and personal and even had several people proofread it before I sent it. It was the first job I DIDN'T get after feeling CERTAIN i had the job. Coincidence? I'm still not sure. But i won't be sending any thank you emails again!

vegetable biryani of AZ @ Aug 13, 2009 14:07:38 PM

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