The internet can't decide: Is the post-interview thank-you card dead?
Photo illustration of job interview with software developers. vgajic/Getty Imagess A tweet about job interview thank-you notes sparked an online debate. Some users say thank-you notes are outdated due to changing norms. Others said etiquette has shifted since the pandemic. The internet is getting riled up over interview etiquette. On Tuesday, Alex Lieberman, an entrepreneur who cofounded Morning Brew, Tenex, and Storyarb, wrote on X that he is "floored" that the majority of job candidates he interviews don't send thank-you notes afterward. "Back when I was interviewing for jobs, it was one of the biggest faux pas to not send a thank you email. Like instant disqualification," he wrote. Lieberman's post sparked a hot debate on X, with some commenters describing the post-interview thank-you note as "interviewing 101," while others dubbed it unnecessary. As of publication time, the X post has garnered nearly 500 comments. 'Etiquette no longer exists' Among those who weighed in was Matt Grimm, a cofounder of Anduril, who said the thank-you card doesn't matter to him. strong strong disagree! I've never not once cared about a thank you email or not... Completely irrelevant — Matt Grimm (@mttgrmm) December 30, 2025 Others said the thank-you note is still essential. If they don’t follow up they don’t care about the job, easy signal — Dave Christison (@dave_christison) December 30, 2025 Several commenters said they felt sending a thank-you note was once considered standard practice before the COVID-19 pandemic. But with more interviews now taking place remotely, the traditional cues of in-person interactions and more formal processes may have become less ingrained, they said. "Might just be me but that was the turning point for humanity changing how we interact with others," one person wrote, referencing the pandemic as the turning point. It may also be a hangover from the Great Resignation, a period after the pandemic when talent was in high demand and labor shortages meant that power shifted to workers. Job seekers had the upper hand at that point and possibly felt less pressure to adhere to traditional etiquette. This period of intense labor demand eventually gave way to the Big Stay and the Great Frustration, where the power dynamic has shifted back to employers as the job market tightens. Job seekers now talk about being ghosted by employers during the interview process. The hiring process has become less and less personal and highly bureaucratic and robotic. And it's a volume thing. People are applying to and interviewing with dozens of companies. The process is time- and soul-consuming for most. They're not thinking about people or etiquette,… — Tina Sindwani (@tinasindwani) December 31, 2025 "Communication norms go both ways. Etiquette no longer exists," one commenter wrote. Austin Hughes, cofounder and CEO of Software company Unify, wrote on X that a thank-you note "probably feels like sending a message into the void" in the current job market. "But it 100% still stands out every single time someone does it and should be basic etiquette," he said. Still, some posters on X simply don't see the value in a thank-you note regardless of where the power lies. "I never did it because it felt fake. You need an employee, I need a job, who are we kidding here," one wrote. Read the original article on Business Insider