eastcoastprimate Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 Now that I've narrowed down my list of potential POIs, I've been wondering a bit about follow-up etiquette. How long should one wait after sending a first initial email before either resending it or writing a new follow-up email? A week? 2 weeks? A month? Never? I'm sure each professor is different in terms of their threshold for annoyance, but I was just curious what the general consensus is with this.
iphi Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 Oh boy, it's tough... I'd say maybe 3 weeks with "Followup" in the subject line. If you still hear nothing then don't write back.
bsharpe269 Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 I personally wouldnt send a follow up, though I know that others on here might disagree. Many PIs even say that they get a bit annoyed by a single email since they perfer that interested students contact them after being admitted. I know that this feeling isnt universal and many PIs feel very different. Either way, I would stick with one email. If they dont respond then I would take that as a sign that you should wait until interview weekend to speak in more detail.
eastcoastprimate Posted September 16, 2014 Author Posted September 16, 2014 Thanks! To clarify, I'm in a field where contacting a POI to find out if they are taking students/interested in you as a potential student is the norm. It's so hard to tell - I know most professors get so many emails that I'm sure these "prospective student" emails get lost in cyberspace.
TakeruK Posted September 16, 2014 Posted September 16, 2014 I'd follow up after a month or so. However, if you sent your first email like 2 weeks before the application deadline, I wouldn't follow up at all, since I wouldn't want to be sending these kinds of emails after the application deadline has passed and they are making decisions. Like you, I sent my emails to ask if they are interested in a student for topic X so that I can decide whether or not to apply to the school, and obviously this is pointless when the application deadline has passed! In general, I sent the first set of emails around October and a followup in November. My response rate was roughly (I sent emails to approx. 24 professors): 1/3 of professors did not respond at all 1/3 of professors gave very short emails that range from neutral (standard info about applications/saying that US schools don't usually hire grad students directly into a lab/no commitment on whether the prof would want to work on topic X) to potentially slightly annoyed (i.e. statements like "Please apply and talk to me when you have a decision") 1/3 of professors gave actually useful information and wanted to discuss potential work further with me, or also equally useful, telling me that they are no longer working on X and/or they have no funding for X (so that I would need to do extra TAing and apply for grants if I wanted to do this work). On average, I emailed 3 profs from each school, and coincidentally, for most the schools I received one reply of each type! I don't think the negative responses hurt my application success rates and I definitely think that while the negative responses don't make you feel good, the positive responses are well worth it. I actually don't worry too much about the negative responses because I really wanted to work on a certain subfield in my PhD and I didn't want to be in a program that made no promises on what kind of work I could do. That is, I wanted to jump right into work in a certain field instead of spending the first 2 years trying a bunch of stuff and then starting dissertation research. So the negative responses helped me figure out which profs/programs I might not get along with as well.
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