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According to the email I received from the employer, sent by [email protected], I could reply to this email to respond to the employer's message. Below that, it suggested I join Stack Overflow to view the full message thread as well as review my application/resume for the job posting this message was related to.

I hadn't signed up for Stack Overflow with that particular email (my professional email) so went for it. From this point, I can't seem to find any reference to this email chain, application/resume review and, generally speaking, no proof that my response was sent.

Where can I find this information? Can I assume the employer received my response?

Verbatim, the bottom of the email says "You can respond to company by replying to this email.

Join Stack Overflow to view the full message thread, review your application for position, ask questions about interesting roles, receive interest from companies, and more."

The native email app on Android doesn't appear to respect reply-to in headers. This issue goes back as far as 2009 from what you can see.

This issue is present on the email app v. 6.75.14.

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  • I'd love to check that for you. Can you send me your email address you replied from via email? find my address on my profile. Thanks!
    – g3rv4 Staff
    Commented Feb 23, 2017 at 16:03
  • @g3rv4 emailed you :)
    – kotlx
    Commented Feb 23, 2017 at 16:06

1 Answer 1

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After following up with kotlx via email, here's what happened:

When we send an email to a candidate with an employer message, we send the following headers with it:

From: "Employer Name (Stack Overflow)" <[email protected]>
Reply-To: [email protected]

The RFC 2822 says that, when present, email clients should be sending replies to the address specified on the Reply-To header... but his email client replied to do-not-reply@ (the one in the From header) instead.

This wouldn't have been a big deal if we rejected that (he would have noticed something wasn't ok almost immediately)... but right now, do-not-reply@ doesn't send anything back. It just fails without any kind of feedback.

I provided him with his particular reply-to address, he sent the response there, and now that message has been successfully received by the employer.

What we're doing to ensure this doesn't happen again:

  1. When we receive an email at do-not-reply@, avoid failing silently. DONE
  2. Move away from this Reply-To pattern (punted, potentially for ever)
  • After going this way and giving it a try, we found a couple issues:
    • We need to ensure DMARC validations pass for the the reply subdomain
    • We need to have our code handle bounces (they are sent to do-not-reply@ right now)
    • There're many things that break by doing what I thought was a trivial change (it was live for a couple minutes and I learned this the hard way).
  • This is why we will keep the Reply-To header in the short term. We expect that the auto-responder (which we will be implementing today) provides enough feedback to people using odd email clients to know that something went wrong.
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  • 6
    Could I also suggest that you change "You can respond to company by replying to this email." (assuming that is quoted verbatim) to "You can respond to the company by replying to this email." - If I received an email with poor grammar like that, I would immediately think it was a phishing scheme. "receive interest from companies" is also poorly worded, and would typically imply a phishing attack.
    – YowE3K
    Commented Feb 24, 2017 at 2:18
  • 9
    We're currently using "You can respond to <companyName> by replying to this email", which is better IMO, as you know who you'd be replying to ;)
    – g3rv4 Staff
    Commented Feb 24, 2017 at 13:01
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    "There're many things that break by doing what I thought was a trivial change (it was live for a couple minutes and I learned this the hard way)." was there, did that. Yep.
    – Braiam
    Commented Feb 27, 2017 at 19:50
  • +1 for learning the hard way. :D Commented Mar 3, 2017 at 3:10

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