Employer-initiated communication breakdown after initial recruiter contact is a documented, widespread pattern. Candidates who have established recruiter contact, completed calls, and advanced through early stages experience complete communication cessation. This is structurally distinct from application rejection — it reflects an internal process failure on the employer side.
Documented Signal
77%
of job seekers report being ghosted by employers
Indeed Hiring Lab — Candidate Ghosting Survey, 2021
Key Finding
“Post-contact ghosting is not rejection. It reflects an internal organizational breakdown — recruiter departure, pipeline reorganization, headcount freeze — not a candidate assessment outcome.”
Most Common Breakdown
77%
of job seekers report being ghosted by employers
Indeed Hiring Lab — Candidate Ghosting Survey, 2021
Key Finding
Post-contact ghosting is not rejection. It reflects an internal organizational breakdown — recruiter departure, pipeline reorganization, headcount freeze — not a candidate assessment outcome.
Systemic Signal
“Post-contact ghosting is not rejection. It reflects an internal organizational breakdown — recruiter departure, pipeline reorganization, headcount freeze — not a candidate assessment outcome.”
Recurring pattern observed across submitted hiring cases
Institutional Reinforcement
77% of job seekers report being ghosted by employers during the hiring process.
Indeed Hiring Lab, 2021
Classifier convergence detected
Institutionally reinforced hiring pattern
Intelligence Feed
2-layer
failure: ATS then post-contact ghosting
Post-ATS Ghosting Occurs at Elevated Rates — Clearing the Filter Doesn't Mean Engagement
Classifier convergence detected
Gate 1 of N
ATS passage doesn't predict process completion
ATS Passage Is Necessary But Not Sufficient
Classifier convergence detected
Pattern Convergence
ATS keyword filtering and post-contact employer ghosting co-occur: ATS passage triggers recruiter visibility but does not predict process completion. Candidates are ghosted at elevated rates even after demonstrating sufficient keyword match to advance.
Industries Affected
Seniority Levels Affected
Structural Analysis
Post-contact ghosting occurs when an internal process breaks down after candidate contact has been established. Common causes: the recruiter managing the process departed with no handoff, a hiring freeze was implemented after outreach was sent, an internal candidate emerged, or the role was restructured. Organizations rarely have policies requiring communication to candidates when these internal events occur.
Institutional Research
“77% of job seekers report being ghosted by employers during the hiring process.”
Indeed Hiring Lab, 2021
“10% of job seekers report ghosting even after receiving a verbal job offer.”
Indeed Hiring Lab, 2021
“44% of job seekers report having been ghosted by an employer after an interview.”
SHRM Candidate Experience Research, 2022
Operational Implications
Post-contact ghosting is the most common reason for mid-process silence — more prevalent than active rejection without communication
The distinction between ghosting and rejection is meaningful: ghosting indicates process failure, not candidate elimination
Follow-up attempts after ghosting have low yield — the contact is often no longer monitoring communications or has departed
Ghosting patterns co-occur with ATS filtering: candidates who pass ATS still encounter recruiter non-follow-through at elevated rates
Personal Diagnosis
Understanding systemic patterns is the foundation. A diagnosis shows you specifically which of these failure mechanisms are operating on your resume and the role you're targeting.
Check your resume →Related Intelligence
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