As many as one in four job hunters have applied for so-called ‘ghost jobs’ which the company never actually intended to hire anyone for, data shows.
Ghost jobs are positions advertised on recruitment websites by firms who have no intention of hiring for them, or may not even have the role open.
According to data from HR, payroll and recruitment firm Employment Hero, employers may post ghost job adverts in order to build a candidate pipeline for future roles, test salary expectations or gauge interest from the market.
Younger people and graduates are especially suffering as a result of this, with more than a third, 37 per cent, saying they believe they have applied for a ghost role online.
This comes as part of a wider trend of ‘graduate ghosting’, where job seekers find themselves ignored by prospective employers even after having completed tests or exams as part of the hiring process.
Non-existent: Employment Hero says some employers may post ghost job adverts in order to build a candidate pipeline
As many as eight in ten people say they have applied for a role and received no response, while half say this is the most frustrating part of the job search.
Kevin Fitzgerald, UK managing director at Employment Hero, told This is Money: ‘The hiring system rewards visibility and optionality, not honesty, providing space for these ghost jobs.
‘Many employers post roles to test the market, benchmark salaries, build pipelines, or simply keep their brand visible, often without any real intention to hire.
‘Whilst it’s difficult to pinpoint exactly how many ghost jobs are out there, what our research does show is that one in four UK workers believe they’ve applied for a role that didn’t genuinely exist, rising to more than a third of 18-34 year olds.’
On top of this, as few as 38 per cent of job roles that appear in online searches are relevant to the search terms, Employment Hero said, with job seekers instead facing a mass of potentially irrelevant results.
While ghost jobs are hugely inconvenient for job hunters, they aren’t usually malicious.
However, ghost roles have also been linked to phishing activity, where fraudsters use fake job adverts as a ruse to get people to send them their personal information.
It can be hard to differentiate between the two.
Fitzgerald said: ‘Fake listings designed to harvest personal data make matters worse, and combined with mass applications and poor communication, the labour market feels impersonal and broken.
‘Until recruitment is rebuilt around verified employers and real vacancies, ghost jobs will keep multiplying – and trust in the job market will continue to fall.’
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