What You’ll Learn
π« The Myth
“Sending a thoughtful follow-up or thank-you email after your MBA interview shows professionalism and reinforces your candidacy. It demonstrates genuine interest, reminds the panel of your strengths, and can tip the scales in borderline cases. Smart candidates always send a personalized note within 24 hours of their interview.”
After every interview, candidates agonize over the “perfect” follow-up email. They craft thank-you notes referencing specific conversation points. They highlight achievements they forgot to mention. They express enthusiasm and gratitude. Some send emails to the admissions office hoping they’ll be forwarded to panelists. Some even try to find panelists on LinkedIn. All of this effort is based on corporate hiring normsβwhich don’t apply to B-school admissions.
π€ Why People Believe It
This myth is imported from a completely different context:
1. Corporate Hiring Practices
In job interviews, follow-up emails ARE often expected and sometimes helpful. Hiring managers may have ongoing relationships with candidates. A well-crafted thank-you can reinforce interest. Candidates transfer this corporate norm to B-school admissionsβwhere the process works entirely differently.
2. “It Can’t Hurt” Logic
Many candidates think: “Even if it doesn’t help much, sending a thank-you email can’t hurt, right?” This assumes neutral worst-case. In reality, it wastes your mental energy, can occasionally annoy recipients, and diverts focus from what actually matters.
3. Need to Feel in Control
After the interview, you have zero control over the outcome. The waiting period is psychologically difficult. Sending an email creates the illusion of “doing something”βtaking action, influencing the process. It’s anxiety management disguised as strategy.
4. Anecdotal “Success” Stories
“I sent a thank-you email and I got in!” These stories circulate. What candidates don’t realize: they got in because of their interview performance, not the email. The email and the admission were coincidental, not causal.
β The Reality: How B-School Admissions Actually Works
Understanding the actual decision process reveals why follow-up emails are irrelevant:
The B-School Decision Process (What Actually Happens)
Panelists interview 15-20 candidates in a day. They take notes. They assign scores on structured rubrics. When your interview ends, they’ve completed their evaluation.
Their job is done when you walk out the door.
Interview scores are submitted to the admissions committee. Panelists move on to the next batch of candidates. They don’t track individual candidates. They don’t receive follow-up communications.
The admissions office handles all candidate communication.
The committee looks at: CAT score, academics, work experience, interview scores, diversity considerations. They compare across ALL applicants. A thank-you email isn’t part of this data set.
The committee sees numbers and notes, not emails.
Offers, waitlists, and rejections are determined by the committee based on holistic evaluation. By the time results are announced, your interview happened weeks ago. No one remembers (or received) your follow-up email.
The decision was made in the committee room, not an inbox.
Why Follow-up Emails Don’t Work in B-School Admissions
| Aspect | Corporate Hiring | B-School Admissions |
|---|---|---|
| Who interviews you | Your potential future manager/team | Faculty/alumni panel with no ongoing relationship |
| Interviewer’s involvement after | Often makes or influences final decision directly | Submits score, no further involvement in your case |
| Can interviewer be contacted? | Often yesβemail, LinkedIn, phone | No direct contact; all communication via admissions office |
| Does follow-up reach decision-maker? | Usually yesβhiring manager sees it | Noβpanelists don’t see it; admissions office may or may not |
| Can email influence decision? | Potentiallyβreinforces interest, clarifies points | Noβdecision based on structured scoring, not correspondence |
| Volume of candidates | Often 5-20 for a position | Thousands of applicants, hundreds interviewed |
What Actually Happens to Your Follow-up Email
Best case: Acknowledged with a form response, changes nothing
Typical case: Archived unread
Worst case: If persistent/inappropriate, creates mild negative impression
Best case: Polite “All the best” response, no impact
Typical case: Ignored
Worst case: Perceived as boundary-crossing, mildly inappropriate
β οΈ The Impact: Why This Myth Wastes Your Time and Energy
| Resource | Spent on Follow-up Emails | Better Investment |
|---|---|---|
| Time (1-2 hours) | Crafting the “perfect” thank-you note, researching panelist backgrounds, finding contact details | Preparing for your next interview, reviewing weak areas, practicing responses |
| Mental energy | Agonizing over wording, worrying if it was received, checking for responses | Processing interview learnings, building confidence for next opportunity |
| Emotional investment | Hoping the email “helps,” disappointment when there’s no response | Accepting what you can’t control, focusing on what you can |
| Focus | Dwelling on completed interview instead of moving forward | Forward momentumβnext interview, next opportunity |
Every minute spent on follow-up emails is a minute NOT spent on actual interview preparation.
Candidates often have multiple interviews within days of each other. The time spent crafting a pointless email for Interview A could be spent improving your performance for Interview B.
I’ve seen candidates so focused on “following up” with one school that they walked into their next interview under-prepared. The follow-up that changed nothing cost them the interview that could have changed everything.
Prioritize future opportunities over past ones you can’t influence.
When Follow-up Actually Backfires
While a single polite thank-you email is harmless (if pointless), some candidates go further:
β Multiple follow-up emails asking for “updates”
β Finding and contacting panelists on personal social media
β Calling the admissions office repeatedly
β Sending additional “supporting documents” after interview
β Having references contact the school on your behalf
These actions can create a negative impression. Admissions offices note candidates who cross boundaries. Persistence that seems professional in sales or corporate settings comes across as inappropriate in academic admissions.
The line between “enthusiastic” and “annoying” is easily crossed.
π‘ What Actually Works: Post-Interview Best Practices
Instead of writing follow-up emails, here’s how to productively use the post-interview period:
The Productive Post-Interview Protocol
Write down: What questions were asked? Which answers went well? Which felt weak? Any surprises? What would you do differently?
This creates learning for your next interviewβunlike a thank-you email that teaches you nothing.
“My ‘Why MBA?’ answer was vagueβI need a clearer version.” “I fumbled the current affairs questionβI should read more deeply.” “I talked too fast when nervousβI need to practice pausing.”
Concrete improvements for future interviews.
If you have another interview coming, that’s where your focus belongs. Review that school specifically. Practice the questions you struggled with. Apply lessons from the interview you just completed.
Your next performance is controllable. Your last one isn’t.
You cannot influence the outcome now. The interview is complete. The evaluation is submitted. Making peace with this uncertainty is healthier than manufacturing fake control through pointless emails.
Channel interview anxiety into interview preparation, not email writing.
What to Do Instead of Writing Follow-up Emails
| Time Period | Wasteful Activity | Productive Activity |
|---|---|---|
| First 2 hours | Drafting thank-you email | Writing detailed self-debrief |
| Same evening | Researching panelists on LinkedIn | Reviewing next school’s website and recent news |
| Next morning | Checking if email got a response | Practicing improved answers based on debrief |
| Following days | Wondering if follow-up “helped” | Full focus on upcoming interviews |
| Waiting period | Sending “checking in” emails | Continuing preparation for other schools |
If you genuinely need to communicate something important:
Rarely, there may be a legitimate reason to contact admissionsβa significant update to your application (major promotion, published work, national-level achievement) that occurred AFTER your interview.
In such cases: Keep it brief, factual, and through official channels (admissions email, not LinkedIn). State the update clearly. Don’t disguise it as a thank-you note. Don’t overdo the enthusiasm.
This is rare. “I was nervous and want to clarify my answer” is NOT a legitimate update.
The Right Mindset for the Waiting Period
- Writing emails to feel like you’re “doing something”
- Obsessing over whether follow-up was “received”
- Stalking panelists on social media
- Reading forums about what emails “worked”
- Convincing yourself the email will help
- Accepting that the outcome is now out of your hands
- Focusing entirely on your next opportunity
- Using waiting time for genuine preparation
- Maintaining perspectiveβthis is one school among many
- Trusting that your interview spoke for itself
π― Self-Check: Are You Prone to Follow-up Email Anxiety?
Follow-up emails don’t help your B-school candidacy. Unlike corporate hiring, B-school admissions is a structured process where panelists submit scores, admissions committees deliberate, and decisions are made based on documented evaluationβnot post-interview correspondence. Your thank-you email either never reaches decision-makers or gets politely ignored. The time and energy spent on follow-ups is better invested in preparing for your next interview. Once you walk out of that interview room, your performance is locked in. Accept that reality. Channel your energy forward. Trust that your interview spoke for itself. The only thing you can still influence is your NEXT opportunityβfocus there.