Picture the scene.
You’ve just gone through the emotional turmoil of losing your job. Or maybe something’s happened at work to galvanise your decision to make a change.
You take a bit of time to figure out what the right next move is - a great idea.
Then you go through the obvious channels to see what jobs are out there.
The most obvious of which are job boards and other websites which promote jobs.
Your first reaction is one of hope and optimism - there seems quite a bit out there, so maybe you’ll secure something quickly.
And if you happen to be reading this, new to a job search, indeed you may.
However, for many people in this market, comes a pretty quick realisation that a significant number of adverts do not represent jobs that exist.
A double whammy in your emotional rollercoaster of recent weeks.
Today’s article looks at what ‘fake jobs’ are and what to be mindful of. There are a few categories to go through, each with different nuance, but ultimately the outcome is the same: an advert that, at best, wastes your time.
This what we’ll go through:
Scraping
Relisting
Laziness
Evergreen vacancies
Fishing
Scams
The disappearing act
First a quick overview from the recruiter perspective.
When you put an advert up, you may allow a bit of time for applications to come in before assessing them and starting the interview process.
Let’s say the volume is manageable, and the outcome not guaranteed, particularly when a candidate you want to offer decides to take a different job instead.
There are no villains in this common scenario, and it’s common enough that risk is a consideration when advertising.
If a recruitment process takes six weeks from advert to offer, and the outcome isn’t guaranteed, it can make sense to leave the advert up, in case you need more candidates in your pipeline.
What about if your process takes three months? Illness, holiday, lack of availability, changes - there are many reasons a process can be delayed.
There are many tools and suppliers which support a hiring process, one of which is the job board, and often features are developed to support ‘what happens if things go wrong’. Or to maximise applications with the apparent intent of enabling wider choice, which can lead to many issues in its own right.
Scraping
Scraping is when one website takes content from another and relists it. This can happen as an affiliate/aggregation/commercial arrangement, or to drive traffic to the scraping website.
The idea is that this increases eyeballs on the content.
In the context of job adverts, you can see this everywhere, although things are changing. For example Indeed and LinkedIn both have relisted adverts from elsewhere.
It’s changing because now some job boards have secured volume of traffic, they want to monetise that traffic and keep control of the adverts.
An indication that this happens is when you click ‘apply now’ it takes you to another website other than the employer’s, such as jobrapido which (I believe) is an aggregator.
This can happen multiple times, and every time a job is scraped there can be parsing errors where data from fields are incorrectly transferred.
While if the original advert is then updated, it’s not necessarily the case for scraped adverts.
So scraped adverts can give inaccurate salary, locational, or even job information. They can also stay listed when the original has closed, without the employer ever knowing about it.
Leading to looking like a fake job.
Relisting
As a feature for advertisers, many job boards allow an automatic relisting of adverts, once a week/month, to ‘bring it to the top of the pile’.
These relists can occur throughout the lifespan of an advert, such as in the example above - six weeks in an advert appears new, but a candidate is about to be offered.
Here, the vacancy may be live, but your application may not be considered, because it is so far in process.
This can also happen manually for many reasons.
I’ve taken down a job after a couple of weeks to rewrite it, based on fine tuning from an interview process. Or when a candidate has declined an offer put forward to them. Or when a vacancy has been put on hiatus.
The reason for a manual relisting might be unknowable if it isn’t stated in the advert, but it isn’t necessarily for bad reason.
If I were to relist an advert, it would only be because I need more candidates, in which case your application would be read.
But in many situations relisting can encourage an application that won’t ever be assessed.
Laziness
Unfortunately it is the case that adverts may remain listed simply because someone forgot to take them down.
This is more likely to happen if there isn’t a cost per advert, such as on an employer website, or if there is an unlimited contract.
Evergreen vacancies
Some vacancies are perpetually advertised to enable a candidate pipeline for a particular specialism.
There may be no vacancy now, but anticipation of vacancies in future, particularly within larger employers, or perhaps an recruitment agency that specialises in that field.
I would hope this is made clear in the advert, but that doesn’t always happen.
Fishing
Sometimes those adverts aren’t evergreen, they’re simply there to harvest applications on the off chance that vacancy comes up.
I remember a Cambridge agency that used to scrape employer adverts, list them as their own, then submit those CVs speculatively to the same employers - without a commercial arrangement in place.
Make of that what you will - I think it’s despicable behaviour.
Is there any way to check for fishing? I’d probe the advertiser for specific information, and what their relationship is with the hiring process.
However, that’s not proof of bad behaviour, because of how the contingency model works. When multiple agencies work on one vacancy, it’s common not to provide company information until later in the process.
Conversely, if an agency is fishing only to build a bank of CVs, it’s unlikely they’ll admit to it.
Scam jobs
It sickens me that advertising and job scams are on the rise.
If it doesn’t feel right, if they are asking for payment, if they do a bait and switch (this job isn’t right but here’s our CV writing service), if they ask for ID that can be used for other purposes:
Beware.
Here’s some information from Indeed on what to look out for.
Here’s an example of a scam I came across early this year.
The disappearing act
This last category may or may not be a fake job.
Here’s the scenario - it looks like a vacancy, it sounds like one in discussion, perhaps you even interview there on site, perhaps you even do a 5 hour presentation at final interview on your 90 day strategy.
But then it disappears. Either permanently, or maybe reappearing but with no further comms from the employer/agency.
I hear this happening a lot, particularly at a senior level, in the UK market.
There are a few reasons it can happen, not all indicative of fakeness:
Company had budget to recruit; however changes in the business, or external factors, means the vacancy isn’t viable at least immediately
Company didn’t have budget to recruit and only establishes there is no budget later in process
Company runs an interview process to get free consultancy in the form of a final interview presentation (scumbags)
Company dipping toe in market to see what’s out there, with no intent to hire
Company benchmarking internal hire for future planning purposes
Agency establishes there may be a need for employer to hire and runs speculative process that doesn’t get approval
I’m sure there are many more reasons this can happen, and there isn’t a huge amount you do, given the appearance is that of a real vacancy.
You can ask if budget has been approved, do your research on the business on glassdoor or by speaking to alumni. But ultimately this kind of vacancy is a Schrodinger’s Cat - you won’t know if it’s live or not until the process is complete.
The purpose of this article is to highlight how this happens, but it’s also to set your expectations.
If you go into a fresh job search understanding this can and will happen, I hope it takes the sting away if you come across it. And enables you to get to the truth of which jobs are actually out there sooner.
This article may help you get better use of job boards, for the vacancies that count.
Thanks for reading.
Greg
Greg, you nailed it: many job postings don’t represent real opportunities. For anything above entry-level or non-managerial roles, job boards are often a frustrating time sink.
Instead of chasing ghosts, turn things around—make LinkedIn work for you.
Headhunters use it as their primary database to find talent.
Optimize your profile with industry-specific keywords, fill out all sections, and focus on visibility.
My advice as a recruiter:
▶︎ STOP APPLYING BLINDLY TODAY.
▶︎ START ATTRACTING REAL OPPORTUNITIES BY BEING DISCOVERABLE WHERE RECRUITERS ACTUALLY LOOK.