How to Limit Ghosting in Your Hiring Process

by | Jan 21, 2021

Ghosting is a term normally associated with dating, but it’s recently made it into the vocabulary of most recruiters.

Why? Because according to findings from Dr. John Sullivan, it’s become a common part of the hiring process in all industries.

When a recruiting prospect inexplicably cuts off communication near the end of the hiring process, it’s expensive and frustrating.

Here are some suggestions from Dr. Sullivan to minimize recruitment ghosting:

Reinforce the hire. Remind and reinforce the many reasons why the new hire was initially attracted to the opportunity and why it was superior to their current situation.

Remind them that they are expected/needed. Let the new hire know you’ve scheduled activities to make them feel welcome and ensure that they fit into the team.

Get the new hire to end their job search. Take proactive actions to minimize the chances that the new hire will receive and accept another competing offer.

Reduce new job anxiety. Provide information covering common high-anxiety concerns. Increase interactions with the team to overcome fears that the new hire won’t fit within the group.

Remember, the hiring process doesn’t end until your new agent is productively working in their new position.

 

The Simple Psychology of Real Estate Recruiting [2nd Edition]

Unlock the secrets of effective real estate recruiting. Revised to include actionable frameworks for sharper execution and to help you turn psychological theory into a repeatable recruiting system.

The Library Effect

The Library Effect

The Library Effect is something you can easily apply to recruiting, and it’s one of the reasons that accountability groups are so effective.

Just getting together with other hiring managers and recruiting for a set period of time each week will short-circuit many of your recruiting excuses.