And yeah seems pretty standard. Just...get a good spam filter
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"I am the best in the world at everything I do, and I don't have to write it on the back of a T-Shirt to prove it, because I AM it." - Chris Jericho
From: Colegreen_c12 | #007 Email is by far the best way to get it.
You have all the information there typed and easily accessible.
Also that.
I actually had to coax a caller for all the details(Gee, you didn't think to mention that I had to bring stuff before I asked you?). That was just unprofessional.
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My Little Phineas and Ferb: Summer is Magic! Aww, I lost to SuperNiceDog, Winner of the Rivalry Rumble Guru Contest
From: MarvelousGerbil | #010 Have an e-mail for all your spam crap (like [email protected]) and another for professional stuff ([email protected]) if it's that hard.
This. I have an email that is basically my name, which is the one on my CV/Resume and all that. My old email, phillipe schillipe which I made when I was 14 and have regretted since, is the one I used for miscellaneous, unprofessional stuff
From: MZero11 | #012 I meant other people probably have a bunch of spam. Not I!
I just didn't think to look for it. I thought they would've called if anything >_>
"She was born in the 80s, she still uses her phone as a phone!"
But seriously, e-mails are a much better way to communicate in a lot of ways for job interviews. A lot of people are desperate for jobs these days, so they may answer a call when they're in a bad environment to be doing so if they're waiting for a call. You can also ask questions more easily since you'd have an e-mail to reply to. It may be awkward to go through a phone tree to get someone who may not have remembered the details of your application. If you have questions later you'd probably let them go if you only had a phone number to call, but it's easier to e-mail.