Metadata
Title
Supervisors
Category
courses
UUID
bebe26bde0f94f7794794a8b7c7890b8
Source URL
https://www.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/study/research/supervisors/
Parent URL
https://www.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/study/research/discovermore/contact/
Crawl Time
2026-03-11T05:25:56+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Supervisors

Source: https://www.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/study/research/supervisors/ Parent: https://www.bmh.manchester.ac.uk/study/research/discovermore/contact/

Contacting the project supervisor is a key step on your PhD journey

Your supervisor will play a vital role throughout your PhD journey, offering support and guidance, providing crucial feedback, fostering critical thinking, and much more beyond.

They also play an important part in your postgraduate research application and your selection for their project, so it's crucial you contact them before you apply.

Here's a step-by-step guide for contacting a supervisor and some top tips for successfully making contact:

On this page:

Related pages:

Find a supervisor

When applying for an advertised project you’ll be able to find the project supervisor and any co-supervisors listed in the project details.

If you have external funding (for example, from your government) to research a specific area of biology, medicine and health, you’ll need to browse our research groups and identify supervisors whose research aligns with your own proposed research.

It’s worth noting that the vast majority of postgraduate research opportunities in the Faculty are for pre-defined, advertised projects and only on rare occasions are self-defined projects successful.

Why contact the supervisor?

Once you’ve found your supervisor you'll need to get in touch with them before you make an application. If you apply without speaking to your supervisor it’s highly likely your application will be unsuccessful.

Getting in contact with your supervisor gives them the opportunity to understand who you are, assess whether you're a suitable candidate for their project and ensure you’re passionate about their specific area of research. This also saves you from spending time completing an application, only to find out you’re not the right candidate.

It’s not just important for the supervisor though. It’s also important for you to find out more about the project, making sure both the project and supervisor are a good fit for your interests and ambitions.

Contacting the supervisor beforehand also helps you to make a good first impression and helps to build rapport ahead of three or four years of closely working with them.

Additionally, if you’re applying for a self-funded project, they may be able to provide advice and guidance on funding, nominate you for any internal funding opportunities, or make you aware of any external funding they are aware of.

What to check before you contact the supervisor

Tips for successfully contacting the supervisor

Writing your email

In your email you should include:

Next steps

If the supervisor is interested in you joining their research group, they will get back in touch with you.

You may be invited to meet the supervisor informally either in-person or online, or they may ask to submit a formal application.

If you have any questions, make sure you ask them before applying or when you meet with them.

If your application is successful you’ll then be invited to a formal interview.

Can’t get in touch with the supervisor?

You may not get a response from the supervisor of your chosen project for a variety of reasons.

At this stage, it's worth considering if it's worth your time to persevere or if this project perhaps isn't the best fit for you. You might want to consider if you would be better off refocusing your efforts on other projects.

Your chances of successfully contacting a supervisor and applying for a postgraduate position will be far greater if you focus on specific projects that match your passion, skills and experience. Remember to tailor each contact and application to the specific supervisor.

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