75% of candidates do nothing in the 48 hours after a career fair. Of the candidates who get offers, almost all sent a follow-up the same day. This is the highest-ROI hour of your job search.
Why 24 hours?
The recruiter you talked to met 30–80 candidates that day. By Tuesday, your face has blurred with 50 others. Sending a follow-up within 24 hours does three things:
- It lands while they're still building their shortlist — not after.
- It gives them a written record (LinkedIn message or email) they can forward internally.
- It signals you're someone who follows through, which is what they're hiring for.
What to send — pick the right channel
Use this hierarchy:
- The recruiter's direct email, if they gave it to you. Best channel — keeps it inside their workflow.
- LinkedIn DM with a connection request, if you don't have email. Personalize the request itself, not just the follow-up.
- The "Apply" button in the booth, if no individual contact. Then send a follow-up via LinkedIn naming the recruiter and the date.
The 4-line template
Don't over-craft this. Recruiters value brevity. Use this exact structure:
Hi [name],
Thanks for the conversation at the Tampa Virtual Career Fair on October 6. I really appreciated what you said about [one specific thing] — it's exactly the kind of [team / problem / culture] I'm looking for.
I've attached my resume and you can find my LinkedIn here: [link]. I'd love to set up a longer conversation when works for you — happy to come prepared with any questions or work samples you'd like to see.
Thanks again,
[Your name]
[Phone]
Specifics beat enthusiasm
The two worst phrases in a follow-up are "I really enjoyed our conversation" and "I'm very excited about this opportunity". Recruiters delete those without reading further.
Instead, reference one specific detail from your chat:
- "What you said about your team's shift to a 4-day workweek really resonated…"
- "The project you mentioned around supplier consolidation in the Mid-Atlantic is exactly the kind of problem I worked on at my last role…"
If you can't remember anything specific, that's a sign you weren't really present — fix it next time by taking notes during the conversation.
Following up on follow-ups
If you don't hear back in 7 calendar days, send one polite nudge:
"Hi [name], just bumping this up in case it got buried — I'd love to hear if there's a next step on the [role] we discussed. Thanks!"
That's it. Don't send a third message. If they don't respond after two, the answer is no — and that's information you can act on. Move on.