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  • Asked on March 2, 2021 in Other.

    “Thank you for taking me into consideration” means thank you / for taking time/effort/ to do something that involved you / assessing me in some way.

    Is it common sense to write a thank you letter or a thank you letter just to the job interviewer? If not, how.

    Then you ask the right questions

    about your application and your interview. Then get into a confidential chat and say “Thank

    you for taking the time to read my application and perform a very good interview with me” 1: Thank you for taking me in consideration. – This is improper.

    2:Thank you for taking me in consideration. – This is correct

    3: Thank you for considering me – This is correct but a more informal. Does it sound like a new work for a newbie? Is there anything wrong with it, but #2 above is the common ‘professional’ phrase.

    What will I do should I

    write to the task force for “under consideration”, but it does not mean any other action or one proposal. The Task Force should take whatever you write if you require advice, but not over consideration. The

    person who gets your advise tells you that he/she will start thinking about it (consider) but does not make any promises that he/she will actually use it or do anything about it.

    It is commonly used in form-letters (e.g. a string). Standard letters used to reply to everyone in text. Normally people use this way to say “thank you for your advice, what should I do?”

    In the context of a job search or application they might say “Thank you for your application, we will take it under consideration” which means they will think about it but they don’t promise you will be accepted.

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