You don’t have to scroll far on LinkedIn these days to see it:
“Four interviews. A case study. A final panel… and then—nothing.”
No rejection. No feedback. No closure. Just silence.
If you haven’t been job hunting recently, it’s easy to shrug this off. Is it really that bad?
If you have… you already know the answer.
It’s worse.
The convenient excuse: “We’re overwhelmed”
Ask most companies why candidates are being ghosted, and you’ll hear a familiar refrain:
“We’re getting flooded with applications. We just don’t have the capacity to respond to everyone.”
On the surface, that sounds reasonable.
But here’s where the story breaks.
These same organizations are investing heavily in AI, automation, and “scalable systems.” So why can’t they send a simple status update?
Because the issue isn’t volume.
It’s design.
Most hiring systems were never built to scale human experience—only to process resumes. And no amount of AI will fix a broken candidate experience if the strategy behind it hasn’t changed.
The quieter truth: “It’s not worth our time”
There’s another reason companies don’t say out loud:
With so many candidates in the pipeline, responding—especially to those who didn’t make the cut—just doesn’t feel like a high-value use of time.
And to be fair, many HR teams are stretched thin.
Layoffs have reduced recruiting teams, while expectations have stayed the same (or increased). The people left behind are juggling sourcing, interviewing, onboarding, and everything in between.
So, ghosting becomes… normalized.
Not because it’s effective.
But because no one has stopped to challenge it.
The market illusion leaders are buying into
Right now, it feels like an employer’s market.
Layoffs dominate headlines. Talent seems abundant. Open roles feel scarce.
Which creates a dangerous assumption:
“We hold the power.”
We’ve seen this before.
Think about the housing market over the last decade, especially here in the Seattle area. Buyers were offering cash, waiving inspections, and bidding $100K+ over asking just to compete.
Sellers had all the leverage.
Until they didn’t.
Markets shift. They always do.
And what looked like a permanent advantage turned out to be a temporary window.
What companies are missing
Ghosting candidates doesn’t just close a loop.
It creates a ripple effect.
Every ignored candidate becomes:
- A disengaged future applicant
- A negative word-of-mouth amplifier
- A potential lost customer
- A quiet reputational risk
And here’s the part many leaders underestimate:
The people you ghost today are the same people you’ll want to hire tomorrow.
Or sell to.
Or partner with.
Or get referred by.
As Richard Branson famously said:
“It takes 30 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it.”
Companies think they’re optimizing for efficiency.
But what they’re actually doing is eroding trust—at scale.
The real cost of “efficiency”
Ghosting isn’t a neutral act. It’s a decision.
And like most short-term decisions, it comes with long-term consequences:
- Weakened employer brand
- Lower candidate re-engagement
- Increased cost to attract talent later
- Hidden revenue loss from damaged perception
In other words…
What looks efficient today becomes expensive tomorrow.
A better question for leaders
Instead of asking:
“How do we handle the volume?”
The better question is:
“What experience are we creating—and will it still serve us when the market shifts?”
Because it will.
It always does.
What’s your take?
Have you experienced candidate ghosting—or seen it from the inside?
What else do you think is driving it right now? What are some positive outcomes from employers behaving badly?
(I’ll share my though on those in an upcoming article, stay tuned )
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Yvonne Lee-Hawkins, IPHM, is a Holistic Career & Burnout Coach, strategist, and writer, who spent 20 years in corporate and leadership functions. When she is not working, she loves to go on nature adventures with her family, in the Pacific Northwest where they call home. You can find out more on her website, or follow her on LinkedIn, Medium, or Instagram.
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