7. First Email to Supervisors

Many research-based master's and doctoral programs in some universities expect you to connect a supervisor prior to applying while others may assign a supervisor once you apply/ start in your program. If there is such need of having the approval of a potential supervisor, then it is recommended to write to potential supervisors in advance (keep in mind about the deadlines of scholarships and deadlines for a certain university intake). 

Usually, most universities have 2 intakes for postgraduate studies. They are fall intake (starting on August/ September) and winter intake (starting on December/ January). For fall intake, deadlines for MSc/ PhD applications are usually ranging from September (previous year) to April (applying year). For winter intake, deadlines for MSc/ PhD applications are usually within May to August. However, this may vary according to the country, university, and your desired program.

To find potential supervisors who have parallel research interests like you, you can follow either method as given below.

  • Just google it as “ supervisors of the research area in university name
  • Go to University website -> Research section -> Research centres/ groups
  • Go to University website -> Under Faculty & Staff section
  • Go to University website -> Departments (under Academics section) -> Select possible department where the interesting research area can exist -> Faculty/ lecturers/ staff directory section

This is not easy if you actually need to get a considerable amount of responses from supervisors. It should be specific and not a copied one. All the important documents should be attached in the first email. I have prepared the first email after studying the materials and comments given by various professors and experienced graduate students. The first email is really significant to convince a potential supervisor that you will be a good research student under him/her and it can also secure financial assistance to do your postgraduate study (if the supervisor already has some funding).


There is no right or wrong way to write the first email, but the only thing you should pay more attention is to provide a brief but also a sufficient amount of details to prove him/ her that you will be an outstanding research student. My first email consists of 3 paragraphs.


1st Paragraph

Summary of interest of yourself to particular supervisor/ department and objective of this email

 

Interest to work with respective supervisor,  proof to show that I have referred his/her research work, reference of respective department's graduate school website, if there is any link to particular university/supervisor, the objective of this email

2nd Paragraph

Summary of yourself to show the supervisor that you are a good candidate

Educational and research background, work experience, IELTS/ GRE scores,  current status

3rd Paragraph

Your expectations and passion, ultimate goals and thanking

Interest to the particular research area and reason for that, future goals, expected study intake, enquiry of MSc/ PhD opportunities, reason for the selection of a particular university, expression of gratitude

I made a word document for each supervisor I was going to write to and then each document contains the email with their email addresses. I have sent the following attachments to supervisors.
I made the draft of the first letter to supervisors and then changed it according to supervisors, department & university. The most important thing is that many supervisors do not prefer to read ordinary or generic emails which have the same content to any Professor. So be specific, then the supervisor will have a good impression that you certainly have an interest in working with him. Then, send the email according to the time zone. Many supervisors receive lots of emails by prospective students and these emails will be stacked up. So it is always better to send it on their time at 8.00 am (check time difference) on a working day.

· Transcript & Degree certificate

· Research publications 

· Academic CV

· Other certificates (including IELTS/ GRE Scores)

· Service letters (worthy if only related to academic field)

It is a well-known fact that all the supervisors whom you contact may not reply to you. It is very ordinary and you do not need to worry. The safest thing to do is to write to supervisors as much as possible until you are able to obtain some reliable options. After sending the first email, you can send three reminders in the following 3 weeks. I have maintained another Excel sheet for including the details of responses from supervisors I received. 

* You can refer the Excel sheet I prepared in the following drive for further understanding.

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vyAMCsL7CTnDzw0t0U1guUitBEMfutPL/view?usp=sharing


Types of replies I received;

  • Impressed and like to have an interview
  • Impressed, but at the moment no funding and there may be some opportunities later, so later contact
  • Impressed, but no funding, if the university scholarship can be obtained then welcoming to his/her lab
  • Impressed, but he/she has no funding
  • Impressed, but he/she has no available spaces for new students
  • Impressed, but he/she are not in a position for supervising
  • Impressed, but he/she are not available for supervising (Ex: Sabbatical/ maternity leaves)
  • Sent some forms to fill (Ex: expression of interest) and later contact
  • Not replied even after 3 reminders 

Therefore, depending on the responses I have created a colour code and screen out some supervisors who were not able to do supervising me. I have included it in the excel sheet I created for supervisor responses and it helped me to decide to which supervisors I should contact further/ send reminders, etc. That sheet includes all the details of the supervisor name, university, replied/ not, response details, colour code, date of the email sent, the number of reminders sent, etc.

  • Red: No option
  • Orange: Not sure yet
  • Yellow: Maybe
  • Green: Most probable

It is always better to connect with/ get approval from more than 1 supervisor because sometimes even after approval and making the online application, the supervisor can change his/her mind due to some unavoidable situation. It may not be very common, but I experienced such a situation that one of my MSc application was rejected at the last moment because of being unable to secure the supervisor.

* You can study some materials uploaded (which I have used as references) in the following drive for further understanding. 

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1RfQO9ap-8k_jvX3HySjdayF7DU3svebi?usp=sharing

Comments

MalHansi said…
Thank you for the feedback 👍
Nemesh said…
Very Informative. If you don't mind can you share one of your first emails that got the acceptance from a Professor?
MalHansi said…
Thank you Nemesh for the feedback. Please note that I am not going to provide any specific documents I prepared (ex: Research proposals, SOP, academic CVs, first email etc). But I believe that you can create your own documents with the guidance and samples I included in my blog. For sample emails, please see the drive link at the end of this article.
Unknown said…
Thank you very much for the detailed explanation. I have written to several supervisors after going through your articles. So far 2 supervisors replied saying that they cannot provide funds but if funding is not a problem, they are willing to accept me. Can you please let me know whether securing funds is a must to apply for a thesis based masters program?
MalHansi said…
Thank you for the feedback. I think currently, there is a comparatively high number of funding issues for thesis-based programs due to the financial states that resulted in this COVID situation. In fact, I heard about similar experiences from some of my friends/ juniors. However, it will be back to normal as soon COVID situation is well controlled. Thus, don't lose your hope and with this situation, you may need to write to many professors than you write in a normal situation. Because it doesn't mean that all the professors have the same issue because some countries are doing well/ coming to stable states.

Getting a fund directly from a professor is more convenient for studies in some countries as I feel. Because you don't need to apply for other scholarships externally and only the professors' acceptance is mainly needed. But, if the professor cannot fund you, it doesn't mean you don't have any option. You can try for scholarships provided directly by the university/ government or by external bodies. In general, for these, you may have to apply separately and get selected.  

1) Scholarships provided by the university: NTU Research Scholarship provided by NTU, Melbourne Research Scholarship given by University of Melbourne (here you don't need to make an application for scholarship separately),
2) Scholarships provided by the government: Canada Graduate Scholarships, Australia Awards Scholarships, etc
3) Scholarships provided by the external bodies/companies:  Erasmus Mundus Joint Masters scholarships, DAAD scholarships, Schlumberger scholarship, etc

If you get such a good scholarship then you can cover your tuition fees and living costs by yourself without getting payments from the professor. Some scholarships can be competitive but depends on your qualifications.
Unknown said…
Thank you very much for the reply. What you are doing is really great because this is the best site that I could find with very clear guidance. Keep up the good work. Hope your help in the future as well. Thank you
MalHansi said…
Thank you for the feedback and yeah I hope to include more articles with the experiences I get during my PhD study. Thank you!
Nemesh said…
Thanks for the reply. I missed the drive link.
MalHansi said…
You are welcome.
Unknown said…
Thank you very much for the informative post. I have heard that you shouldn't contact more than one potential supervisor from one university. Is this true?
MalHansi said…
It cannot be guaranteed that you would get an opportunity by the first professor you contact in a particular university. So it is very common to write to multiple professors (at the same time) in the same university. Not all the professors will agree to take you under him/her. Because, some professors may already exceed their maximum number of students in his/her team or their available funds, may have sabbatical/maternity leaves, or may even not be impressed by your profile.
Therefore, due to that uncertainty, students usually write to many professors. However, if one professor in a particular university agrees to take you as his/her student, then you do not need to contact others in that university.
Unknown said…
Thank You so much for the reply.
Moses AJ said…
Thans a lot for your information! Really helpful!
Impressive post series and thanks for sharing your knowledge.

Could I please know the average number of words that each of your first emails contained? I usually end up writing 350-400 words, but I'm not sure whether it is too much.

Thank you!
Paramitha said…
Thank you for your valuable advice. Could you please help me to review my email for professors?
Khadija said…
Hi Malsha,

its really helpful that you providing guidance for us to study higher education, I have a question, actually I am a natural science fresh graduate and I did not followed any research subject. if I want to study a research based MSC, is it possible ? if not what is the possible way ?