You are not logged in
Free Special Reports

Get Your FREE HR Management Special Report. Download Any One Of These FREE Special Reports, Instantly!

Featured Special Report

Claim Your Free Copy of Top 10 Best Practices in HR Management

HR professionals have the opportunity to play a more strategic role in the business by keeping up to date with the latest HR innovations--technological, legal, and otherwise. This special report will discuss how HR managers can anticipate and address some of the most challenging HR issues this year.

Topics in this special report include:

  • Healthcare in 2012
  • FMLA Paid Leave Initiatives
  • Ethics
  • Social Media
  • Environmental Responsibility
  • Workplace Wellness
  • Classifying Employees
  • Retirement of Baby Boomers
  • Identity Theft
  • Communications

Make sure you have the information you need to know about these current HR challenges and how to most effectively manage them in your workplace.

Download Now!

Bookmark and Share
August 10, 2007
Thank-You Notes Help Candidates' Prospects

Eighty-eight percent of executives say that sending a thank-you note following an interview can boost a job seeker's chances, and most executives prefer a handwritten note, according to a survey by the staffing firm Accountemps.

For a Limited Time receive a FREE HR Report "Top 10 Best Practices in HR Management." This comprehensive special report will give you the information you need to know about these current HR challenges and how to most effectively manage them in your workplace.   Download Now

The survey found that more job candidates are sending thank-you notes after an interview. Executives polled said half (51 percent) of the candidates they interview send thank-you notes afterward, compared with 39 percent five years ago.

The survey also asked executives about how they prefer to receive thank-you messages from candidates following interviews:

  • 52 percent said a handwritten note
  • 44 percent said e-mail
  • 3 percent said they prefer to receive both an e-mail and handwritten note.

"Regardless of how someone believes he or she performed during the interview, sending a short thank-you note afterward demonstrates initiative and courtesy," says Max Messmer, chairman of Accountemps. "Conveying appreciation in a well-written message is not only polite, it also can distinguish a job applicant from others vying for the same position."

Messmer added that the best strategy often is to send an e-mail shortly after the interview, followed by more formal correspondence. "E-mail ensures immediacy, but hiring managers still favor the personal touch of a handwritten note," he said.

The survey included 150 senior executives--including those from human resources, finance and marketing departments--with the nation's 1,000 largest companies.


Twitter  Facebook  Linked In
Follow Us
WEBARRAY6
Copyright � 2012 Business & Legal Reports, Inc. All rights reserved. 800-727-5257
This document was published on http://HR.BLR.com
Document URL: http://hr.blr.com/HR-news/Staffing-Training/Recruiting/Thank-You-Notes-Help-Candidates-Prospects/