Anyone have a nice.. "Sorry you didn't get the part" letter template they want to share?
Thanks
Thanks
It's refreshing to see such an approach. I know, if I was an actor, I'd appreciate you taking the time out of your day to reply.
Not many do. Which is always up for debate. Different people have different methods. However, I wish it was common practice.
If the tables where turned, and the job was different, wouldn't you want to hear back?
The thought is positive, but the likely situation is that it adds confusion and a chance for the rejected to ask "why?"
If you do answer that, you'll be subjected to a heap of emails back and forth as they vie for another shot. If you don't give it to them, you look like a jerk. If you don't answer the email at all, you look like a jerk.
I'm fine with not hearing back when I don't get a job. The reason isn't important, in most cases, just that I need to do keep moving forward.
As a business practice, it's probably best to cap it off in the audition/interview.
As a personal choice, well, have to make your own.
Yeah, just different approaches.I'll always have/find the time to answer honestly to those who have took time out to audition for our work. Whether that will be immediately after the audition, or otherwise.
I'm hoping that won't change, once our productions grace a larger scale of cast/crew.
Perhaps it's a factor of how I was raised, and more importantly, where. There was a famous football manager named Bill Shankly. He was manager at the time of the most successful club in the world. Possibly the greatest manager that ever lived. Yet, he still found the time to answer every letter that was sent to him by fans. Everytime his doorbell rang, he answered, and spoke to people for aslong as he could. He was a working mans man. He was for the people.
I've grown up listening to stories of the glory days, and of "The Liverpool way". Bill Shankly, the man, was at the core of that.
I like to think I can try to adapt that same outlook, and I think I will.
Differing approaches.
Papertwin, for the record, though I trust that Bill Shankly was a great man, Mike Ditka would kick his ass.
That being said, I think I like this "Liverpool Way" that you speak of.
There was a thread, not so long ago, in which I bemoaned how uncurtious I thought it was that film festivals send out impersonal-mass-email rejection letters. Can you seriously not take the time to write one personalized sentence to me? Yeah, I know that they get hundreds, if not thousands of submissions, but all I'm asking for is one freaking sentence.
I'm not an actor, but based on my experiences with film festivals, I think I would appreciate a (very carefully worded) rejection-letter. You might want to include a reminder that the entire process is of course 100% subjective. Also, instead of "you didn't get the part", I think the standard nicety is "we've chosen to go another direction" (otherwise, I think Uranium's example looks quite dandy). For each applicant, if you can throw in one polite compliment, something to let them know that this email was actually written for them, not just a mass-email, I think that'd be really cool.
I haven't sent many but my last one was to a composer who's work i liked but wasn't fitting for the project.
Paraphrasing what i wrote: Thank you for your application. Unfortunately the position has already been filled. However, i'll keep you in mind if a future project requires your talent. Etc. Etc.
As a West Ham fan if an actor didn't get the part I just send them a letter with some bullets in it...