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Emailing HOD to enhance faculty application


emailing contacts after applying for faculty jobsWhat are committees looking for in a cover letter for a faculty application?Should all voluntary self-identification forms for faculty positions be filled?emailing contacts after applying for faculty jobsShould I use fancy paper for non-resume application materials?Updating an application for a faculty positionHow to evaluate (my) faculty application?Asked to draft own recommendation letter for faculty applicationA time frame for a faculty position application application in UKFor faculty positions: Cover letter vs. a letter of applicationHow is the applicant's bringing attention to his/her own application viewed if you know nothing about him/her?













5















I am a postdoc in the process of applying for faculty position in universities. Most applications require you to apply all the materials on an online portal or careers page, which I do.



Now there must be hundreds or more applications. To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively. If it helps, what should the content of the email be?



I have seen a similar question on SE: emailing contacts after applying for faculty jobs, but my question deals with an unknown person at the university.










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    It is probably better to email before you submit your application and ask, does my CV fit or am I competitive? If the HoD says no, you and him/her would have saved some time. Otherwise, he/she may remember your application when it comes through.

    – Prof. Santa Claus
    Apr 4 at 22:24











  • Maybe use a nice LaTeX letter template. Friends of mine have been invited just for the sheer look of their letters. uweziegenhagen.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/blog.png

    – Uwe Ziegenhagen
    Apr 5 at 5:22















5















I am a postdoc in the process of applying for faculty position in universities. Most applications require you to apply all the materials on an online portal or careers page, which I do.



Now there must be hundreds or more applications. To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively. If it helps, what should the content of the email be?



I have seen a similar question on SE: emailing contacts after applying for faculty jobs, but my question deals with an unknown person at the university.










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    It is probably better to email before you submit your application and ask, does my CV fit or am I competitive? If the HoD says no, you and him/her would have saved some time. Otherwise, he/she may remember your application when it comes through.

    – Prof. Santa Claus
    Apr 4 at 22:24











  • Maybe use a nice LaTeX letter template. Friends of mine have been invited just for the sheer look of their letters. uweziegenhagen.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/blog.png

    – Uwe Ziegenhagen
    Apr 5 at 5:22













5












5








5








I am a postdoc in the process of applying for faculty position in universities. Most applications require you to apply all the materials on an online portal or careers page, which I do.



Now there must be hundreds or more applications. To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively. If it helps, what should the content of the email be?



I have seen a similar question on SE: emailing contacts after applying for faculty jobs, but my question deals with an unknown person at the university.










share|improve this question














I am a postdoc in the process of applying for faculty position in universities. Most applications require you to apply all the materials on an online portal or careers page, which I do.



Now there must be hundreds or more applications. To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively. If it helps, what should the content of the email be?



I have seen a similar question on SE: emailing contacts after applying for faculty jobs, but my question deals with an unknown person at the university.







application faculty-application assistant-professor






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Apr 4 at 13:46









nxkryptornxkryptor

4332512




4332512







  • 1





    It is probably better to email before you submit your application and ask, does my CV fit or am I competitive? If the HoD says no, you and him/her would have saved some time. Otherwise, he/she may remember your application when it comes through.

    – Prof. Santa Claus
    Apr 4 at 22:24











  • Maybe use a nice LaTeX letter template. Friends of mine have been invited just for the sheer look of their letters. uweziegenhagen.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/blog.png

    – Uwe Ziegenhagen
    Apr 5 at 5:22












  • 1





    It is probably better to email before you submit your application and ask, does my CV fit or am I competitive? If the HoD says no, you and him/her would have saved some time. Otherwise, he/she may remember your application when it comes through.

    – Prof. Santa Claus
    Apr 4 at 22:24











  • Maybe use a nice LaTeX letter template. Friends of mine have been invited just for the sheer look of their letters. uweziegenhagen.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/blog.png

    – Uwe Ziegenhagen
    Apr 5 at 5:22







1




1





It is probably better to email before you submit your application and ask, does my CV fit or am I competitive? If the HoD says no, you and him/her would have saved some time. Otherwise, he/she may remember your application when it comes through.

– Prof. Santa Claus
Apr 4 at 22:24





It is probably better to email before you submit your application and ask, does my CV fit or am I competitive? If the HoD says no, you and him/her would have saved some time. Otherwise, he/she may remember your application when it comes through.

– Prof. Santa Claus
Apr 4 at 22:24













Maybe use a nice LaTeX letter template. Friends of mine have been invited just for the sheer look of their letters. uweziegenhagen.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/blog.png

– Uwe Ziegenhagen
Apr 5 at 5:22





Maybe use a nice LaTeX letter template. Friends of mine have been invited just for the sheer look of their letters. uweziegenhagen.de/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/blog.png

– Uwe Ziegenhagen
Apr 5 at 5:22










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















21















To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively.




Realistically, it does not affect your application at all. Firstly, this does not make you "stand out" nearly as much as you think it does, because quite a few people have the idea that writing some sort of personal letter to the head of the hiring committee improves their chances. Secondly, what do you expect will realistically happen? That the HoD thinks "gee, nxkryptor certainly shows initiative, better put them on the shortlist"? This is really not how academic hiring works.



The most realistic effect is that the HoD sees your email among the >100 mails of the day, exhales a short sigh, and then either directly moves it to "read" or writes you a polite "thanks for letting me know". 120 seconds later they have forgotten your name again, and it won't impact the evaluation of your package in any noticeable way.






share|improve this answer
































    13














    First, the person most involved with a search is the chair of the search committee. Sometimes this is the HoD, but often it is not. Sometimes the HoD is on the search committee and sometimes they are not. Often, and in my opinion ideally, the HoD is not involved in the search until the end.



    Now to answer your question. If you know someone in the department you can, and should, email/call them that you are applying. You should also ask for whatever inside information they have. If you have questions (e.g., I am in subfield X, is that within the scope of the search), then you can email search chair (or whoever the contact point is).



    Do not email the head of department, the chair of the search or anyone on the search committee in an attempt to stand out from the rest of the applicants. That is surely going to backfire.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 3





      I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

      – DreamConspiracy
      Apr 4 at 19:28






    • 1





      @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

      – Bob Brown
      Apr 5 at 2:19











    • @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

      – DreamConspiracy
      Apr 5 at 2:45


















    0














    In disagreement with the other answers: Depending on your field, there may be many people applying who



    1. Are applying for every opening without thinking carefully about it, or

    2. Are likely to receive multiple job offers.

    Nobody wants to waste time offering a job to someone in those categories. An additional contact that informs the head of the search (which may or may not be the department head) that you are aware of the nature of the job and actually want it may make you stand out from people in those two categories.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 1





      As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

      – JeffE
      22 hours ago






    • 1





      Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

      – JeffE
      22 hours ago


















    0














    Your application includes a job letter. Sending an email means that you're simply sending a second job letter. Why would they want to read two job letters from one person?






    share|improve this answer























      Your Answer








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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      21















      To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively.




      Realistically, it does not affect your application at all. Firstly, this does not make you "stand out" nearly as much as you think it does, because quite a few people have the idea that writing some sort of personal letter to the head of the hiring committee improves their chances. Secondly, what do you expect will realistically happen? That the HoD thinks "gee, nxkryptor certainly shows initiative, better put them on the shortlist"? This is really not how academic hiring works.



      The most realistic effect is that the HoD sees your email among the >100 mails of the day, exhales a short sigh, and then either directly moves it to "read" or writes you a polite "thanks for letting me know". 120 seconds later they have forgotten your name again, and it won't impact the evaluation of your package in any noticeable way.






      share|improve this answer





























        21















        To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively.




        Realistically, it does not affect your application at all. Firstly, this does not make you "stand out" nearly as much as you think it does, because quite a few people have the idea that writing some sort of personal letter to the head of the hiring committee improves their chances. Secondly, what do you expect will realistically happen? That the HoD thinks "gee, nxkryptor certainly shows initiative, better put them on the shortlist"? This is really not how academic hiring works.



        The most realistic effect is that the HoD sees your email among the >100 mails of the day, exhales a short sigh, and then either directly moves it to "read" or writes you a polite "thanks for letting me know". 120 seconds later they have forgotten your name again, and it won't impact the evaluation of your package in any noticeable way.






        share|improve this answer



























          21












          21








          21








          To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively.




          Realistically, it does not affect your application at all. Firstly, this does not make you "stand out" nearly as much as you think it does, because quite a few people have the idea that writing some sort of personal letter to the head of the hiring committee improves their chances. Secondly, what do you expect will realistically happen? That the HoD thinks "gee, nxkryptor certainly shows initiative, better put them on the shortlist"? This is really not how academic hiring works.



          The most realistic effect is that the HoD sees your email among the >100 mails of the day, exhales a short sigh, and then either directly moves it to "read" or writes you a polite "thanks for letting me know". 120 seconds later they have forgotten your name again, and it won't impact the evaluation of your package in any noticeable way.






          share|improve this answer
















          To stand out from the rest of the applicants and to bring to attention the application to the head of the department (HOD), would emailing the HOD enhance my application or would it affect it negatively.




          Realistically, it does not affect your application at all. Firstly, this does not make you "stand out" nearly as much as you think it does, because quite a few people have the idea that writing some sort of personal letter to the head of the hiring committee improves their chances. Secondly, what do you expect will realistically happen? That the HoD thinks "gee, nxkryptor certainly shows initiative, better put them on the shortlist"? This is really not how academic hiring works.



          The most realistic effect is that the HoD sees your email among the >100 mails of the day, exhales a short sigh, and then either directly moves it to "read" or writes you a polite "thanks for letting me know". 120 seconds later they have forgotten your name again, and it won't impact the evaluation of your package in any noticeable way.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 4 at 22:10









          David Richerby

          30.4k662126




          30.4k662126










          answered Apr 4 at 14:53









          xLeitixxLeitix

          103k37248392




          103k37248392





















              13














              First, the person most involved with a search is the chair of the search committee. Sometimes this is the HoD, but often it is not. Sometimes the HoD is on the search committee and sometimes they are not. Often, and in my opinion ideally, the HoD is not involved in the search until the end.



              Now to answer your question. If you know someone in the department you can, and should, email/call them that you are applying. You should also ask for whatever inside information they have. If you have questions (e.g., I am in subfield X, is that within the scope of the search), then you can email search chair (or whoever the contact point is).



              Do not email the head of department, the chair of the search or anyone on the search committee in an attempt to stand out from the rest of the applicants. That is surely going to backfire.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 3





                I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 4 at 19:28






              • 1





                @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

                – Bob Brown
                Apr 5 at 2:19











              • @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 5 at 2:45















              13














              First, the person most involved with a search is the chair of the search committee. Sometimes this is the HoD, but often it is not. Sometimes the HoD is on the search committee and sometimes they are not. Often, and in my opinion ideally, the HoD is not involved in the search until the end.



              Now to answer your question. If you know someone in the department you can, and should, email/call them that you are applying. You should also ask for whatever inside information they have. If you have questions (e.g., I am in subfield X, is that within the scope of the search), then you can email search chair (or whoever the contact point is).



              Do not email the head of department, the chair of the search or anyone on the search committee in an attempt to stand out from the rest of the applicants. That is surely going to backfire.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 3





                I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 4 at 19:28






              • 1





                @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

                – Bob Brown
                Apr 5 at 2:19











              • @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 5 at 2:45













              13












              13








              13







              First, the person most involved with a search is the chair of the search committee. Sometimes this is the HoD, but often it is not. Sometimes the HoD is on the search committee and sometimes they are not. Often, and in my opinion ideally, the HoD is not involved in the search until the end.



              Now to answer your question. If you know someone in the department you can, and should, email/call them that you are applying. You should also ask for whatever inside information they have. If you have questions (e.g., I am in subfield X, is that within the scope of the search), then you can email search chair (or whoever the contact point is).



              Do not email the head of department, the chair of the search or anyone on the search committee in an attempt to stand out from the rest of the applicants. That is surely going to backfire.






              share|improve this answer













              First, the person most involved with a search is the chair of the search committee. Sometimes this is the HoD, but often it is not. Sometimes the HoD is on the search committee and sometimes they are not. Often, and in my opinion ideally, the HoD is not involved in the search until the end.



              Now to answer your question. If you know someone in the department you can, and should, email/call them that you are applying. You should also ask for whatever inside information they have. If you have questions (e.g., I am in subfield X, is that within the scope of the search), then you can email search chair (or whoever the contact point is).



              Do not email the head of department, the chair of the search or anyone on the search committee in an attempt to stand out from the rest of the applicants. That is surely going to backfire.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Apr 4 at 13:55









              StrongBadStrongBad

              86.9k24217425




              86.9k24217425







              • 3





                I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 4 at 19:28






              • 1





                @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

                – Bob Brown
                Apr 5 at 2:19











              • @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 5 at 2:45












              • 3





                I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 4 at 19:28






              • 1





                @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

                – Bob Brown
                Apr 5 at 2:19











              • @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

                – DreamConspiracy
                Apr 5 at 2:45







              3




              3





              I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

              – DreamConspiracy
              Apr 4 at 19:28





              I think this answer could be improved by including an explanation for the final paragraph, ie why is this going to backfire?

              – DreamConspiracy
              Apr 4 at 19:28




              1




              1





              @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

              – Bob Brown
              Apr 5 at 2:19





              @DreamConspiracy "nxkryptor? Yeah, he or she is the one who emailed me, trying to do an end-run around the search committee." Will that do?

              – Bob Brown
              Apr 5 at 2:19













              @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

              – DreamConspiracy
              Apr 5 at 2:45





              @BobDrown yes that. You could edit the answer to include this in a helpful and non-condescending way.

              – DreamConspiracy
              Apr 5 at 2:45











              0














              In disagreement with the other answers: Depending on your field, there may be many people applying who



              1. Are applying for every opening without thinking carefully about it, or

              2. Are likely to receive multiple job offers.

              Nobody wants to waste time offering a job to someone in those categories. An additional contact that informs the head of the search (which may or may not be the department head) that you are aware of the nature of the job and actually want it may make you stand out from people in those two categories.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1





                As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago






              • 1





                Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago















              0














              In disagreement with the other answers: Depending on your field, there may be many people applying who



              1. Are applying for every opening without thinking carefully about it, or

              2. Are likely to receive multiple job offers.

              Nobody wants to waste time offering a job to someone in those categories. An additional contact that informs the head of the search (which may or may not be the department head) that you are aware of the nature of the job and actually want it may make you stand out from people in those two categories.






              share|improve this answer


















              • 1





                As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago






              • 1





                Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago













              0












              0








              0







              In disagreement with the other answers: Depending on your field, there may be many people applying who



              1. Are applying for every opening without thinking carefully about it, or

              2. Are likely to receive multiple job offers.

              Nobody wants to waste time offering a job to someone in those categories. An additional contact that informs the head of the search (which may or may not be the department head) that you are aware of the nature of the job and actually want it may make you stand out from people in those two categories.






              share|improve this answer













              In disagreement with the other answers: Depending on your field, there may be many people applying who



              1. Are applying for every opening without thinking carefully about it, or

              2. Are likely to receive multiple job offers.

              Nobody wants to waste time offering a job to someone in those categories. An additional contact that informs the head of the search (which may or may not be the department head) that you are aware of the nature of the job and actually want it may make you stand out from people in those two categories.







              share|improve this answer












              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer










              answered Apr 5 at 1:47









              Anonymous PhysicistAnonymous Physicist

              20.4k84182




              20.4k84182







              • 1





                As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago






              • 1





                Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago












              • 1





                As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago






              • 1





                Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

                – JeffE
                22 hours ago







              1




              1





              As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

              – JeffE
              22 hours ago





              As the former chair of my department’s faculty recruiting committee: No, the additional contact does not help. What you are describing is content for the cover letter.

              – JeffE
              22 hours ago




              1




              1





              Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

              – JeffE
              22 hours ago





              Also: Why wouldn’t you want to interview someone who’s likely to get multiple offers?!

              – JeffE
              22 hours ago











              0














              Your application includes a job letter. Sending an email means that you're simply sending a second job letter. Why would they want to read two job letters from one person?






              share|improve this answer



























                0














                Your application includes a job letter. Sending an email means that you're simply sending a second job letter. Why would they want to read two job letters from one person?






                share|improve this answer

























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  Your application includes a job letter. Sending an email means that you're simply sending a second job letter. Why would they want to read two job letters from one person?






                  share|improve this answer













                  Your application includes a job letter. Sending an email means that you're simply sending a second job letter. Why would they want to read two job letters from one person?







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                  answered yesterday









                  Ben CrowellBen Crowell

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