- The Remote Life OS Newsletter
- Posts
- š Follow-up After (And Win) Interviews
š Follow-up After (And Win) Interviews
Plus: Boosting remote collaboration, the āno helloā club, wealth creation

Hello there š
I hope youāre enjoying your summer āļøI caught my first hurling match at Croke Park (semi-finals between Cork vs. Limerick) which was a blast. Besides that, been catching up with friends in Dublin.
Iām re-starting my friends and family newsletter. This is a personal monthly newsletter: Iāll write about topics that make me nervous and share personal recommendations and updates. You can subscribe here.
I also published my 2024 Q2 update and Q3 goals.
Finally, the third cohort of Land A Remote Job starts in October 2024. More than ever, Iām convinced that remote work is one of the most powerful tools to live a life on your terms, whether you want to travel the world or just be there to pick up your kids from school. This program helps you do just that. Want to learn more? Click here.
Thatās it for the updates š Today in 5 minutes or less, youāll learn three ways to follow up to win interviews.
Plus, the best links and resources on remote work. You'll learn:
š¤ 5 tips to boost remote team collaboration
ā Getting people to join the āno helloā club
šŖ The ladders of wealth creation
Letās jump in:
Someone forward you this email? Click here to subscribe.
š Follow-up After (And Win) Interviews
You're not imagining it. Landing (and then winning) job interviews is harder.
If youāve struggled to ātake down the green bannerā, just know itās not you. You're not the only one going through this.
If itās any consolation, there are macro trends at play:
The unemployment rate (US) is 4.1% (at the time of writing)
The market is contracting in the face of inflation
Weāre facing a historically tough VC market
So when you do land an interview, you need to make it count. You have to squeeze all the juice out of every opportunity you get.
Hereās how:
1/ Stand out with meaningful follow-ups
First, letās get this out of the way: always send a thank-you note. Will it make or break you? Probably not. But itās common courtesy. Do it.
Now, what if you have something you want to add after the interview?
This can get tricky. Weāre often too in our heads. We think we committed an unforgivable faux pax that sank the interviewer⦠while the interviewer was off-screen picking their nose and hoped it wasnāt too obvious š
But if you feel compelled to follow up after an interview, there are right and wrong ways to do it.
Here is one situation my clients ran into recently:
I had an interview with a company Iām interested in. It was a homework assignment review where the interviewer pointed out some areas of weakness in my logic. I felt my response was alright, but not perfect, and not fully representative of my craft. Do you think itās worth sending him a follow-up to talk through his concerns and provide some additional ideas to address them? Or should I just move on?
In this case, if youāre going to follow up, most importantly keep it positive and short.
Whatever you do, do not argue any points they brought up.
There are 3 ābeatsā a follow-up email should hit:
1/ Thanks again for the chat! 2/ enjoyed the chat, and appreciate you pushing me to think about X⦠3/ One thing I realized you were right about was⦠Y. To add to that, I think Z
What you're trying to communicate to the interviewer in this script: Oh, this person is thoughtful and I could see myself having a good working relationship with them. Thatās it. You donāt need to be ācorrectā or provide a point-by-point breakdown explaining your stance.
Hereās a second situation a different client ran into:
They said intellectual curiosity was important at the company, and what I was learning on my own. I think I fubbed my answer, but actually have something good to say. I want to email and explain it a bit. What should I say?
If framed wrong, this type of follow-up after āputting my foot in the mouthā can hurt more than help. Again, any answer should be positive and short. One way of doing this:
Thanks again for the chat, I learned a lot about [company]. Glad to hear intellectual curiosity is such an important part of the culture at [company]. I've actually been geeking out on XYZ, so I think we're aligned in that way :)
P.S. FWIW this client nailed this interview and the 4 afterwards⦠and landed the role š
2/ Perform a post-interview analysis
Thereās one lesson Iāve taken away from training Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu these past 8 years, and it has nothing to do with fighting. Itās this:
You win or you learn.
In every fight, every exchange, youāre either successful⦠or you acquire the knowledge that makes you successful in the future.
A post-interview analysis helps you acquire knowledge from every interview. I encourage my clients to analyze all their interviews. Maximize for learning, regardless of the outcome.
Hereās my 7-step process for a post-interview analysis:
Export the recording to Otter to get a transcript
Export to ChatGPT to clean up the transcript
Read the transcript
Listen to the recording
Ask ChatGPT for ways to improve my answers
Write out my improved answers
Practice my improved answers
3/ Ask for feedback
You should always ask for feedback after an interview⦠both when you go to the next round and when you do not. Feedback is a critical lever in landing your next role.
If the recruiter or hiring manager doesnāt get back to you? Follow-up. Nicely.
Hereās a script you can use:
Hi [Name],
I hope youāre having a great week. Thanks for taking the time to go through the process.
Iād love any feedback on how I could improve to be a stronger candidate. Could you pass on any of the feedback from the interviewers?
I know what youāre thinking:
āBut Chris⦠getting feedback is so rare. I get ghosted all the time. If I do get feedback, itās useless or generic. It doesnāt help me at all.ā
I get it. Itās true, getting feedback can be rare. The rate of getting feedback depends on the companies and roles you target. But, hereās the good news:
You only need 1-2 pieces of great, honest feedback across your entire career to improve your interviewing ability.
Ask for feedback. It might change how you interview for the rest of your life.
Conclusion
Thatās it, the three ways to follow up so to win interviews:
Stand out with meaningful follow-ups
Perform a post-interview analysis
Ask for feedback
Let me know how it goes.
šļø Best Remote Work Links This Week
š¤ 5 tips to boost remote team collaboration
ā Getting people to join the āno helloā club
šŖ The ladders of wealth creation
ā¤ļøāš„ When to do what you love
Thatās a wrap. See you next week š
Any news or feedback? Hit "reply" or DM me here.
š¤ 3 ways I can help you with remote work:
Land multiple remote job offers. Get the exact step-by-step system I used to land 5 remote jobs in 10 years ā and now teach others. Youāll accelerate your job search, get built-in accountability and community, and get direct feedback from me.
Follow me on LinkedIn. Join 10,700+ followers and get daily tips on careers, landing a remote job, and living with your family abroad.
The Remote Life Database. Access the word-for-word scripts and templates that helped me "go remote" for the last 10 years. All 100% free.
Reply