Appointment for interview inquiry

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I have an upcoming interview for a cto discuss to me verbally by the interviewer last week after the interview and he told me to notify me this week but unfortunately i email and sms and email the management regarding this but unfortunately no response. Tomorrow i will have an interview 3 blocks away from their office and its a different company. May i know if its ok or good to visit them to ask regarding my schedule ?







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  • 5




    Have you considered calling them?
    – Raoul Mensink
    Jun 6 '16 at 12:19










  • It is not very clear, what you have done with the company you are interested in.
    – Gautier C
    Jun 6 '16 at 13:29






  • 1




    email and sms are very impersonal ways to contact for a high level job like CTO (I am assuming you are going for a CTO position) and they are very easy to miss, especially if the recipient(s) have busy mailbox(es). Why don't you call the person who facilitated/scheduled your interview and start from that point ?
    – MelBurslan
    Jun 6 '16 at 14:40
















up vote
-5
down vote

favorite
1












I have an upcoming interview for a cto discuss to me verbally by the interviewer last week after the interview and he told me to notify me this week but unfortunately i email and sms and email the management regarding this but unfortunately no response. Tomorrow i will have an interview 3 blocks away from their office and its a different company. May i know if its ok or good to visit them to ask regarding my schedule ?







share|improve this question















  • 5




    Have you considered calling them?
    – Raoul Mensink
    Jun 6 '16 at 12:19










  • It is not very clear, what you have done with the company you are interested in.
    – Gautier C
    Jun 6 '16 at 13:29






  • 1




    email and sms are very impersonal ways to contact for a high level job like CTO (I am assuming you are going for a CTO position) and they are very easy to miss, especially if the recipient(s) have busy mailbox(es). Why don't you call the person who facilitated/scheduled your interview and start from that point ?
    – MelBurslan
    Jun 6 '16 at 14:40












up vote
-5
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
-5
down vote

favorite
1






1





I have an upcoming interview for a cto discuss to me verbally by the interviewer last week after the interview and he told me to notify me this week but unfortunately i email and sms and email the management regarding this but unfortunately no response. Tomorrow i will have an interview 3 blocks away from their office and its a different company. May i know if its ok or good to visit them to ask regarding my schedule ?







share|improve this question











I have an upcoming interview for a cto discuss to me verbally by the interviewer last week after the interview and he told me to notify me this week but unfortunately i email and sms and email the management regarding this but unfortunately no response. Tomorrow i will have an interview 3 blocks away from their office and its a different company. May i know if its ok or good to visit them to ask regarding my schedule ?









share|improve this question










share|improve this question




share|improve this question









asked Jun 6 '16 at 12:18









jheck

64




64







  • 5




    Have you considered calling them?
    – Raoul Mensink
    Jun 6 '16 at 12:19










  • It is not very clear, what you have done with the company you are interested in.
    – Gautier C
    Jun 6 '16 at 13:29






  • 1




    email and sms are very impersonal ways to contact for a high level job like CTO (I am assuming you are going for a CTO position) and they are very easy to miss, especially if the recipient(s) have busy mailbox(es). Why don't you call the person who facilitated/scheduled your interview and start from that point ?
    – MelBurslan
    Jun 6 '16 at 14:40












  • 5




    Have you considered calling them?
    – Raoul Mensink
    Jun 6 '16 at 12:19










  • It is not very clear, what you have done with the company you are interested in.
    – Gautier C
    Jun 6 '16 at 13:29






  • 1




    email and sms are very impersonal ways to contact for a high level job like CTO (I am assuming you are going for a CTO position) and they are very easy to miss, especially if the recipient(s) have busy mailbox(es). Why don't you call the person who facilitated/scheduled your interview and start from that point ?
    – MelBurslan
    Jun 6 '16 at 14:40







5




5




Have you considered calling them?
– Raoul Mensink
Jun 6 '16 at 12:19




Have you considered calling them?
– Raoul Mensink
Jun 6 '16 at 12:19












It is not very clear, what you have done with the company you are interested in.
– Gautier C
Jun 6 '16 at 13:29




It is not very clear, what you have done with the company you are interested in.
– Gautier C
Jun 6 '16 at 13:29




1




1




email and sms are very impersonal ways to contact for a high level job like CTO (I am assuming you are going for a CTO position) and they are very easy to miss, especially if the recipient(s) have busy mailbox(es). Why don't you call the person who facilitated/scheduled your interview and start from that point ?
– MelBurslan
Jun 6 '16 at 14:40




email and sms are very impersonal ways to contact for a high level job like CTO (I am assuming you are going for a CTO position) and they are very easy to miss, especially if the recipient(s) have busy mailbox(es). Why don't you call the person who facilitated/scheduled your interview and start from that point ?
– MelBurslan
Jun 6 '16 at 14:40










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Visiting comes across as pretty forward, it would fit if the company is very informal but not really be appropriate otherwise. As the others said, I think a phone call is the way to go






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    Visiting comes across as pretty forward, it would fit if the company is very informal but not really be appropriate otherwise. As the others said, I think a phone call is the way to go






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      Visiting comes across as pretty forward, it would fit if the company is very informal but not really be appropriate otherwise. As the others said, I think a phone call is the way to go






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
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        up vote
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        down vote









        Visiting comes across as pretty forward, it would fit if the company is very informal but not really be appropriate otherwise. As the others said, I think a phone call is the way to go






        share|improve this answer













        Visiting comes across as pretty forward, it would fit if the company is very informal but not really be appropriate otherwise. As the others said, I think a phone call is the way to go







        share|improve this answer













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        answered Jun 14 '16 at 20:20









        user26491

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