Only 24 percent of job candidates send a thank-you email after an interview.
Meanwhile, 80 percent of hiring managers say a thank-you note influences their evaluation, and 68 percent say it directly affects their hiring decision.
That gap is the largest free advantage in modern job searching. A 100-word email that takes 10 minutes to write changes how a hiring manager thinks about you. Most candidates skip it entirely. The ones who send it move themselves forward in a way the others cannot.
Here's how to actually write one that works.
What a thank-you email is actually for
The thank-you email is not a politeness ritual. It does three specific things.
It reinforces your interest in the role. Hiring managers are evaluating multiple candidates, and enthusiasm is part of the decision. A candidate who follows up signals they care. A candidate who goes silent signals indifference, even if that wasn't the intent.
It keeps you top of mind. Most interview decisions happen over days or weeks. A thoughtful email lands in the interviewer's inbox while they're still forming their impression. That timing matters.
It gives you a second chance. If you stumbled on a question, forgot to mention something important, or wished you had answered differently, the thank-you email is your last chance to fix it. One additional sentence framing your strongest qualification can change the impression you left.
And it signals basic professionalism. When two candidates are equally qualified and one sends a personalized thank-you while the other goes silent, the choice is straightforward.
When to send it
Within 24 hours. Same day if possible.
A morning interview should produce a thank-you by end of business. An afternoon interview deserves an email that evening or first thing the next morning. A Friday interview gets sent Friday evening or Saturday morning, not Monday. Waiting the full weekend looks like you forgot.
For panel interviews, send individual emails to each interviewer within 24 hours. Reference something specific that each person discussed so the emails do not read like copies. This takes 20 minutes total and matters more than people assume.
The 24-hour window matters because interviewers often debrief within a day or two. An email that arrives during that window can directly influence the conversation. An email that arrives after the decision is made changes nothing.
The five-part structure
Every effective thank-you email follows the same structure. Keep it to 100 to 150 words total.
Greeting. Use the name they introduced themselves with. If they said "call me Sarah," use Sarah, not Ms. Johnson.
One line of thanks. Be specific about what you appreciated. "Thanks for the time today" is generic. "Thanks for walking me through the engineering org structure today" is concrete.
Reference one specific conversation point. This is the most important sentence. Mention something concrete you discussed: a project they described, a challenge the team is facing, a roadmap item they mentioned. This proves you were engaged, not going through the motions.
Reaffirm your interest briefly. Connect your skills or experience to what you learned. One to two sentences maximum.
Close warmly but professionally. Express that you look forward to hearing from them. Offer to provide additional information if helpful.
That's it. No need to recap your resume. No need to oversell. The structure works because it is short, specific, and human.
What to actually write: a worked example
Imagine you've just finished an interview for a senior backend engineer role at a fintech company. The hiring manager mentioned the team is migrating from a monolith to microservices.
Here's what an effective thank-you email looks like:
Subject: Great speaking with you about the Senior Backend Engineer role
Hi Jordan,
Thanks for the time today. I particularly enjoyed hearing about the migration from the monolithic Rails app to microservices, and the tradeoffs your team is weighing on service boundaries.
The work resonates with experience I had at my current company, where I led a similar decomposition over 18 months. Happy to share more detail about the patterns that worked and the ones we had to walk back.
Looking forward to next steps. Let me know if there is anything else that would be helpful.
Best,
Sam
It's 95 words. It references a specific conversation point. It connects to relevant experience without rehashing the resume. It offers value without pushing for a decision. It ends warmly.
This kind of email lands. The generic "thanks for your time, I look forward to hearing from you" version does not.
What not to include
Some habits weaken thank-you emails consistently.
Salary or benefits questions. The thank-you email is not the time to negotiate. Compensation conversations happen after an offer, not before.
A full recap of your qualifications. They already have your resume. One brief reference to a relevant skill is enough. Repeating your experience makes the email feel transactional.
Apologies for your interview performance. Saying "sorry I was nervous" or "I wish I had answered that better" draws attention to weaknesses the interviewer may not have noticed. Don't.
Desperation or pressure. "I really need this job" or "please let me know as soon as possible" comes across as pushy. Express enthusiasm without urgency.
Generic flattery. "Your company is amazing and I would be lucky to work there" adds nothing. Reference something specific instead.
Unrequested attachments. Unless they specifically asked for a portfolio piece or work sample, don't add anything. Keep it clean.
The rejection version
Almost nobody writes a thank-you email after being rejected. This is exactly why doing it works.
Subject: Thank you for letting me know
Hi Jordan,
Thanks for letting me know. While I'm disappointed, I genuinely enjoyed learning about the team and the work you're doing on the payments platform.
If similar roles open up in the future, I would welcome the chance to be considered. I was impressed by the team and the direction of the product.
Best wishes,
Sam
Hiring managers remember gracious candidates. Roles reopen. Teams grow. The candidate who stayed professional after rejection ends up on a short list when something new comes up. It happens often enough to be worth the five minutes it takes to write.
Following up if you don't hear back
If the interviewer gave you a timeline, wait until one business day after that deadline before following up. If they didn't, wait five to seven business days after your thank-you email.
Keep the follow-up short:
Hi Jordan,
I wanted to follow up on the Senior Backend Engineer position. I'm still very interested in the opportunity and wanted to ask if there are any updates on the timeline.
Happy to provide any additional information that would be helpful.
Best,
Sam
If you don't hear back after the follow-up, wait another week, then send one final check-in. After that, move on. Three unanswered emails is the maximum. Beyond that crosses from persistent to pushy.
The math actually works
24 percent of candidates send a thank-you email. 68 percent of hiring managers say it influences their decision.
For 10 minutes of writing, you're moving yourself into a small group of candidates who consistently demonstrate professionalism and follow-through. The math is one-sided. Send the email.
If you're preparing for upcoming interviews, make sure your resume is doing its job too. WriteCV runs an honest ATS score with per-bullet feedback in 30 seconds.
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