Ghosted? How to Follow Up Professionally (and When to Move On)

Ghosted? How to Follow Up Professionally (and When to Move On)
You had a great interview. The hiring manager said "We will be in touch by Friday." You sent a thoughtful thank-you email within 24 hours. Friday came. Monday came. Then another Friday.
Silence.
You have been ghosted. And you are not alone.
A 2025 Indeed survey found that 77% of job seekers have been ghosted after submitting an application — receiving no response at all. More disturbingly, 52% reported being ghosted after an interview, and 28% were ghosted after a final-round interview. A Greenhouse study from the same year found that 75% of candidates who applied to a job through an online portal never heard back from the employer — not even an automated rejection.
The practice is so pervasive that Indeed coined a term for it: "interview ghosting" is now tracked as a formal metric in their annual Job Seeker Experience Report. In Germany, the Bundesverband der Personalmanager (BPM) acknowledged in 2024 that candidate ghosting is "one of the most damaging practices in modern recruitment" — eroding employer brands and discouraging talent from applying.
Ghosting is unprofessional, disrespectful, and endemic. Here is how to handle it with professionalism, protect your mental health, and — occasionally — get a response.
Why Companies Ghost
Understanding the "why" does not make it acceptable. But it does make it less personal.
| Reason | Frequency | What It Means for You |
|---|---|---|
| Position was put on hold or eliminated | ~30% | The job disappeared, and no one updated candidates. Not about you. |
| Recruiter overwhelm | ~25% | One recruiter managing 40+ open roles simply drops the ball. Not about you. |
| Internal candidate was selected | ~15% | They knew who they wanted before the posting went up. Not about you. |
| Hiring committee indecision | ~15% | They cannot agree, so nothing happens. Not about you. |
| Recruiter left the company | ~10% | Your point of contact is gone and no one picked up their pipeline. Not about you. |
| Deliberate avoidance | ~5% | They chose someone else and are avoiding an uncomfortable conversation. Cowardice, not your fault. |
A 2024 study by Talent Board found that 60% of employers acknowledge that their candidate communication processes are "inadequate" — yet only 23% have taken steps to improve them. The system is broken, and candidates bear the cost.
The Three-Email Follow-Up Framework
When ghosted, you have three chances to re-engage before you should close the loop. Each email has a distinct purpose and tone.
Email 1: The Nudge (Day +3 After Their Deadline)
Wait 3 business days past the stated deadline before reaching out. If no timeline was given, wait 7 business days after your last interaction.
Subject: Re: [Role Title] Interview — [Your Name]
Hi [Name],
I hope you are having a good week. I wanted to check in on the timeline for the [Role Title] position. I am still very enthusiastic about the opportunity, especially after our conversation about [specific topic you discussed — e.g., "the team's migration to microservices"].
Please let me know if there is anything additional you need from me, or if the timeline has shifted.
Best regards, [Your Name]
Why it works: It is brief, polite, and references a specific detail from the interview — proving you were engaged and remember the conversation. It gives them an easy out ("the timeline has shifted") without being accusatory.
Email 2: The Value Add (Day +7)
If there is no response to Email 1, send one more — but this time, add value. Do not just ask again.
Subject: Thought of your team — [Relevant Topic]
Hi [Name],
I came across [this article / this case study / this tool] about [relevant industry topic] and thought of our discussion about [specific challenge or initiative they mentioned]. Thought it might be useful for the team.
Still excited about the [Role Title] opportunity. Let me know if there is any update on the timeline.
Best, [Your Name]
Why it works: You are not asking for something. You are giving something. This shifts the dynamic from "candidate chasing recruiter" to "professional sharing value." It is memorable, and it demonstrates the kind of proactive thinking that makes people want to hire you.
Email 3: The Graceful Close (Day +14)
If two weeks have passed with no response, it is time to close the loop — on your terms.
Subject: Closing the loop — [Role Title]
Hi [Name],
Since I have not heard back, I am going to assume the team has moved forward with another candidate. I completely understand — these decisions are never easy.
I genuinely enjoyed learning about [Company] and the work the team is doing. If circumstances change or another role opens up that might be a fit, I would welcome the conversation.
Wishing you and the team all the best.
[Your Name]
Why it works: This is the most psychologically powerful of the three emails, for two reasons:
-
Loss aversion. When you "close your file," the recruiter suddenly feels like they are losing you. Research from Kahneman and Tversky's Prospect Theory shows that people weight losses approximately twice as heavily as equivalent gains. If they were just disorganized (not rejecting you), this email often triggers an immediate response.
-
Closure for you. Regardless of whether they reply, you have ended the ambiguity on your terms. You are not waiting. You have moved on. This is critical for psychological health during a long job search.
The Numbers: What Response Rates Actually Look Like
Based on data from Jobvite, Greenhouse, and Talent Board (2024–2025):
| Follow-Up Stage | Average Response Rate |
|---|---|
| Thank-you email (within 24 hours) | 15–20% reply rate |
| Nudge email (Day +3) | 25–35% reply rate |
| Value-add email (Day +7) | 10–15% reply rate |
| Graceful close (Day +14) | 20–30% reply rate |
| No follow-up at all | < 5% ever hear back |
The data is clear: following up dramatically increases your chances of getting a response. Candidates who send at least one follow-up email are 3–5 times more likely to hear back than those who send none. And the "graceful close" email often outperforms the initial nudge — because of the loss aversion effect.
What Not to Do
Do Not Send More Than 3 Emails
Three is the maximum. Beyond that, you cross the line from "professionally persistent" to "that candidate who will not stop emailing." A 2024 survey by Robert Half found that 44% of hiring managers said receiving more than 3 follow-up messages made them less likely to consider a candidate — even for future roles.
Do Not Call Unless Invited To
Phone calls from candidates are increasingly viewed as intrusive. Unless the recruiter gave you their direct line and said "Feel free to call," stick to email. A 2024 LinkedIn survey found that 68% of recruiters prefer email follow-ups over phone calls.
Do Not Express Frustration
Even if you are furious — and you have every right to be — expressing anger in a follow-up email burns the bridge permanently.
Never write this: "I am disappointed in the lack of communication from your team. This reflects poorly on your company."
Even if it is true, the recruiter will immediately delete it, flag your profile, and you will never be considered for any role at that company again.
Do Not Stalk on Social Media
Commenting on the recruiter's LinkedIn post with "Hey, still waiting to hear back about the role!" is a career-ending move. Keep all follow-ups in private channels.
Protecting Your Mental Health
Ghosting is not just rude — it is psychologically harmful. A 2024 study published in the Journal of Occupational Health Psychology found that candidates who experienced repeated ghosting reported higher levels of anxiety, lower self-esteem, and greater cynicism toward employers than candidates who received explicit rejections.
The antidote is not hoping harder. It is building systems that protect you:
- Track everything in a spreadsheet. Application date, follow-up dates, response status. When a role has been in "no response" for 14+ days, mark it as closed and move on.
- Set a "worry window." Give yourself 15 minutes per day to check for responses and worry about pending applications. Outside that window, focus on other things.
- Assume rejection until proven otherwise. This is the single most protective habit. Every application is a "No" until it becomes a "Yes." Plan accordingly.
It Is Not You. It Is Them.
Ghosting says more about a company's hiring culture than about your candidacy. A company that cannot send a form rejection email — literally a 30-second task — is telling you something important about how they treat people.
Follow up professionally. Close the loop gracefully. And move your energy toward organizations that respect the people who want to work for them.
Draft Your Follow-Up Templates with AI →
Sources
- Indeed — Job Seeker Experience Report: Interview Ghosting Data (2025)
- Greenhouse — Candidate Communication Study (2025)
- Talent Board — Candidate Experience Benchmark Research (2024)
- Robert Half — Follow-Up Frequency and Hiring Manager Perceptions (2024)
- LinkedIn — Recruiter Communication Preferences Survey (2024)
- Journal of Occupational Health Psychology — Psychological Impact of Recruitment Ghosting (2024)
- Kahneman, D. & Tversky, A. — Prospect Theory: An Analysis of Decision Under Risk (1979)
Published: February 2026 | Reading Time: 15 minutes