The Shocking Reality of Job Ghosting: How One Graduate Applied to 400 Jobs and Got Only 3 Interviews
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The Shocking Reality of Job Ghosting: How One Graduate Applied to 400 Jobs and Got Only 3 Interviews

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Summary:

  • Graduate Karyna Lohvynenko applied for 400 jobs but received only 3 interviews, highlighting widespread employer ghosting

  • Recruitment consultant Michael Jones confirms ghosting has become the norm in today's competitive job market, especially for entry-level positions

  • AI screening systems are filtering out many applications before they reach human recruiters, creating a "void" for job seekers

  • Unemployment among young people aged 16-24 has reached 16.1%, the highest level in over a decade according to ONS figures

  • Experts recommend developing AI literacy and focusing on people skills to stand out in automated hiring processes

The Shocking Reality of Job Ghosting: How One Graduate Applied to 400 Jobs and Got Only 3 Interviews

After applying for 400 jobs and getting just three interviews, a graduate described how she has been "ghosted" by countless employers.

Karyna Lohvynenko, 21, is completing a masters degree in governance and has a CV that includes work at the United Nations and councils around the UK and US. While she once dreamed of being president of her native Ukraine, she has applied for roles in politics, business and as an entry-level barista, but not even heard back from most employers.

Karyna Lohvynenko Image source: Karyna Lohvynenko

The Ghosting Phenomenon in Job Hunting

The term ghosting is used in the dating world, and means to suddenly cut off contact with someone - but recruitment consultant Michael Jones believes it's becoming increasingly common for job applicants. In a fiercely competitive market, he speaks to graduates like Karyna every week who have applied for hundreds of jobs, and believes AI screening means many are ditched before even being considered by a human.

"If I apply to around 70 jobs per week and only hear back from three, the rest is complete silence - not even a rejection email," said Karyna. "That uncertainty is worse than rejection… it feels like a void. Like your application disappears before anyone even sees it. The ghosting from employers creates confusion, anxiety, and makes the whole process feel dehumanising."

A Strong CV That Still Can't Open Doors

Karyna is currently completing a masters at Cardiff University in governance and devolution, having graduated from Cardiff Met with a degree in business and management with a law pathway. As well as her academic work, Karyna's CV includes international policy work, volunteering and business experience - in the first lady of Ukraine's office, at the United Nations, working with British and American councils, and as an ambassador for the King's Trust.

"I completed everything expected from a graduate… experience alone doesn't open doors," she added.

Karyna in graduation attire Image source: Oksana Lohvynenko

The Impact of AI on Job Applications

Recruitment consultant Michael Jones explains: "I speak to graduates every week who've applied for hundreds of roles and are still struggling to break through and unfortunately, that's [ghosting] become the norm rather than the exception. The reality is that entry level roles are massively oversubscribed right now, and even strong graduates are getting lost in the volume."

Jones said many applications never reach a human decision-maker. "When candidates say it feels like their CV disappears into a void, I completely understand that frustration as we see many applications never reaching a human," he said. "Not hearing back is incredibly disheartening, but in most cases it's down to automated systems and sheer applicant numbers, not a lack of ability or effort."

The Rise of AI Screening and One-Way Interviews

Automated hiring systems may also be shaping the prospects of many applicants, believes Jones. He said: "We're seeing a growing reliance on AI screening and one-way video interviews, particularly at the early stages, and that can feel very impersonal for candidates. The danger is that AI looks for patterns, not potential. If your experience or communication style doesn't match what the system expects, you can be filtered out before anyone actually meets you."

This is something Karyna has experienced in a number of AI-led interviews. "You're essentially speaking to a screen, like a chatbot interface," she added. "There's usually a strict time cap… which is not enough to explain your full experience. You feel cut off before you can properly present yourself."

Michael Jones, recruitment consultant Image source: Sanderson Recruitment

The Broader Job Market Context

Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) released earlier this year showed that unemployment in the UK had risen to its highest level in almost five years, with the rate reaching 5.2% in the three months to December 2025. Young people, particularly, have been bearing the brunt, with unemployment among those aged 16 to 24 rising to 16.1% - its highest level in more than a decade.

Online platform LinkedIn reported competition for roles is fierce among young people, with chief economic opportunity officer Aneesh Raman offering some tips to job seekers on CVs. He said AI literacy is important - knowing what it is and does, as well as focusing on your people skills, showing your achievements, and not obsessing over long-term plans.

Persistence in the Face of Challenges

Since late February, Karyna has been applying daily, often to around 20 roles a day, while balancing studies, work and running a small business upcycling vintage blazers. She has given up on securing a "dream job", and now wants any type of work, but has been rejected for roles ranging from politics, business to an entry-level barista.

Karyna added: "I know I will succeed. This is just a difficult phase, one that's largely outside my control. For now, all I can do is keep applying until someone sees my potential."

Karyna in professional attire Image source: Oksana Lohvynenko

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