KEY POINTS
  • Job seekers and employers are increasingly "ghosting" each other during the hiring process.
  • A hot job market and "circular" behavior have led the practice to become more common in recent years, said career experts.
  • However, ghosting risks reputational harm in the long run, they said.

"Ghosting" isn't just a dating phenomenon: It has grown more common at the workplace, too. And that unreliable behavior risks reputational harm to employers and job seekers, said career experts.

The concept of ghosting — abruptly and unexpectedly ceasing communication with someone (i.e., disappearing) — arose around the mid-2010s as social media and dating apps gained prominence. Merriam-Webster added this new-age definition of "ghost" to the dictionary in 2017.