Ghosting isn’t just bad manners anymore; it is reshaping how candidates and employers view each other, and it is quietly taxing time, morale, and long‑term trust across the job market. When communication stops without explanation, both sides remember— and they adjust future decisions and behaviors accordingly.
What ghosting looks like now
- Between 44% and 62% of candidates now admit to ghosting employers at some point in the hiring process.
- At the same time, more than half of job seekers say they have been ghosted by employers, often after investing significant time and effort.
- Post‑interview silence is especially widespread: about 61% of candidates report being ghosted after an interview, and 89% of employers say candidate ghosting is a significant problem.
This mutual ghosting has become a destructive feedback loop, normalizing non‑response as “payback” on both sides and undermining basic professional reciprocity.
Impact on employers and hiring teams
- Time, cost, and efficiency: When candidates disappear mid‑process or after offers, hiring cycles restart, projects stall, and recruiting teams absorb extra workload and stress.
- Pipeline quality: In‑demand candidates juggling multiple options will quickly walk away from slow or opaque processes, leaving roles chronically understaffed or filled by lower‑fit hires.
- Employer brand damage: Employer ghosting fuels negative reviews and word‑of‑mouth; a majority of job seekers now share bad experiences online and say they will not reapply or recommend companies that ghost them.
In a transparent, review‑driven market, unacknowledged candidates often become vocal critics, which raises long‑term talent acquisition costs and hurts customer loyalty.
Impact on candidates and job seekers
- Emotional toll and trust erosion: Repeated ghosting after interviews or assessments creates frustration, anxiety, and skepticism toward employers and the hiring process overall.
- “Candidate time tax”: Some analyses estimate an average of about 47 hours invested per application process that ends in silence, including research, applications, assessments, and interviews.
- Career and relationship damage: When candidates ghost, they risk burning bridges with recruiters and hiring managers in relationship‑driven industries where reputations circulate quickly.
The result is a more guarded, less engaged candidate pool that may opt out of opportunities sooner or disengage entirely from certain employers or sectors.
Why ghosting is escalating and what it does to the market
- Power shifts and multiple offers: In high‑demand roles, candidates manage several processes at once and drop slower or less transparent employers—sometimes without notice—while employers under pressure also let communication slip.
- Overloaded hiring teams and weak systems: Many organizations lack structured processes or tools for closing the loop with every applicant, which makes ghosting the default outcome when priorities shift.
- Reciprocity and norm change: People who have been ghosted are significantly more likely to ghost in return, reinforcing a new “normal” where silence feels acceptable or even justified.
At the market level, this dynamic reduces overall hiring efficiency, widens inequities for underrepresented candidates who report higher ghosting rates, and makes reputations harder and more expensive to repair over time.
Call to action
Protecting your brand now means treating communication as a core part of the experience, not an afterthought. Whether you are a hiring leader, recruiter, or candidate, consistently closing the loop—even with a brief, honest “no”—is a simple way to differentiate your brand in a noisy, skeptical market.
How is your organization addressing ghosting today, and what one small change could you implement this quarter to improve follow‑through?
