





















Every shortlisted candidate sent Hathaway the exact same ChatGPT thank-you note, prompting Meryl Streep to rule them all out
The first thank-you email looked great. Polished, professional — the kind of note that makes a hiring manager nod approvingly. Then the second one landed. Same words. Then the third. Word for word identical. Anne Hathaway, in the middle of hiring someone, had just watched every candidate on her shortlist submit the same ChatGPT-generated thank-you note without changing a syllable. “I was like, oh no… I see something I’m not supposed to see,” Hathaway said during a Hits Radio interview promoting The Devil Wears Prada sequel, reported by Fortune in June 2026. Her warning was blunt: “If you’re out there thinking that you’re getting away with something, there’s a chance that you might be revealing yourself.”
What once separated standout candidates from the pack has become the fastest way to get eliminated.
Meryl Streep, sitting right next to her, didn’t hesitate: “Nobody on that list gets that job.”
The thank-you note used to be the rare move that separated you from everyone else. It showed you were still thinking about the conversation after the Zoom ended. Generic AI output flips that advantage into a liability — signaling exactly the opposite of what the gesture was supposed to prove.
That pressure driving candidates toward automation is real, though. Many are applying to hundreds of roles over months without a single callback, navigating a market that feels algorithm-driven and dehumanizing. Running the same prompt as every other applicant and hitting send, however, is less like using a tool and more like digital self-erasure.
The difference between AI as a useful draft and AI as a finished product is the difference between standing out and getting filtered out.
AI as a starting point is entirely defensible. AI as a finished product, sent unchanged to multiple employers simultaneously, is not. The fix is simpler than you think: pull one specific detail from the actual interview — a question that caught you off guard, a team dynamic that genuinely excited you, something that couldn’t have come from the job listing alone. According to a LinkedIn analytics leader cited by industry observers, AI-generated letters “tell you nothing about how someone thinks or why they want the role.” One concrete, human sentence outperforms three polished AI paragraphs every time.
In a competitive, high-stakes role, a generic AI thank-you may hurt your chances more than sending nothing at all. The bar isn’t “write like a novelist.” It’s just: sound like you were actually in the room.
此内容由惯性聚合(RSS阅读器)自动聚合整理,仅供阅读参考。 原文来自 — 版权归原作者所有。