Back to blog
10 min read

What Recruiters Wish Candidates Knew: 10 Insider Tips That Change Everything

Straight from recruiters: the mistakes they see daily, the things that impress them, and what actually matters in your application.

career advicerecruitersjob searchcv tips

Recruiters spend their working days looking at CVs, conducting screens, and making hiring decisions that candidates never fully see from the outside. They develop a clear picture over time of the mistakes that eliminate otherwise strong candidates, the signals that make someone worth a phone call, and the behaviours that distinguish candidates who navigate the process well from those who undermine themselves.

Most of this knowledge stays inside recruiting circles. Candidates keep making the same preventable mistakes, recruiters keep seeing them, and the gap between what candidates think impresses and what actually impresses persists year after year.

This is a direct account of the ten things recruiters most consistently wish candidates knew.


1. Your CV Is Screened in Under 30 Seconds — Make the First Screen Count

Recruiters reviewing CVs for an active role are typically processing 80 to 200 applications per open position. The time budget for an initial screen is real and unforgiving: experienced recruiters make a first cut in 15 to 30 seconds per CV. In that time, they are looking for three things: is this person's background relevant to what we need? Are there any obvious credibility signals (companies, results, credentials)? Is the document easy to read?

The practical implication: the top third of your CV determines whether the rest of it gets read. If your summary is generic, if your most impressive experience is buried below a long list of older jobs, if the formatting is dense and hard to scan — you will lose at the first screen regardless of the quality of what is on the page.

Put your strongest signal at the top. Write a summary that establishes your specific value in two to three sentences. Use clear section headers, consistent formatting, and white space that makes the document scannable. This is not about making your CV look pretty — it is about making it possible to evaluate quickly.

2. Generic CVs Are Rejected at a Rate That Would Shock Most Candidates

The single most common mistake recruiters see is candidates submitting the same CV to every role with no tailoring. From the recruiter's perspective, a generic CV is a signal: this candidate did not care enough about this specific role to invest twenty minutes in making their application relevant to it.

This sounds harsh, but the logic is real. If a candidate who meets all the requirements on paper is competing against a candidate who also tailored their CV to the specific role, the tailored candidate wins the screen almost every time. The tailored CV is simply easier to evaluate — the hiring manager does not have to mentally map the generic background onto the specific requirements.

The good news is that tailoring does not require rewriting your entire CV. It typically means: adjusting your summary to match the language and priorities of the role, reordering your skills section to foreground what is most relevant, and making sure the bullets in your most recent role echo the specific competencies the job description is asking for.

Tools like NextCV make it practical to generate a tailored version against any job description in minutes — which is the only realistic way to sustain this discipline across a multi-role job search.

3. LinkedIn Consistency Matters More Than Candidates Realise

Recruiters almost always check a candidate's LinkedIn profile after receiving their CV. The most common red flag is inconsistency: dates that do not match, titles that differ significantly, companies that appear on one but not the other. These discrepancies are not automatically disqualifying, but they create friction and uncertainty that can tip a borderline decision toward rejection.

Keep your LinkedIn profile and your CV consistent on: job titles, company names, employment dates, and major achievements. If you use a slightly different framing on each (the CV is more achievement-focused, LinkedIn is more narrative) that is fine. The facts need to match.

A secondary point: LinkedIn profiles that are sparse, inactive, or have a clearly outdated photo are missed opportunities. Recruiters view your profile before and after a screen. A strong profile reinforces a strong CV. A weak profile can undermine one.

4. The ATS Is Not the Enemy — Poor Keyword Matching Is

Applicant tracking systems (ATS) are widely blamed for rejecting strong candidates through algorithmic filtering. This fear is mostly overblown for professional and managerial roles — most ATS systems at mid-to-large companies are used as a database and search tool, not as an automatic rejection engine. Recruiters search the database for candidates using keywords.

The practical implication: keywords matter not because an algorithm is automatically rejecting your application, but because a recruiter searching the database for "product operations" or "B2B SaaS" or "CSRD compliance" will find candidates whose CVs contain those terms and miss those whose CVs describe the same skills in different language.

Read the job description. Note the specific terms used for the skills and experience they are looking for. Make sure your CV uses that language (where it is accurate) rather than synonyms or paraphrases. This is not gaming a system — it is communicating clearly to the people who are searching for you.

NextCV — your premium CV, tailored to every job request

5. How You Communicate During the Process Is Evaluated From the First Email

Every interaction with a recruiter from first contact through offer is part of the evaluation. Candidates sometimes treat the interview as the only formal assessment and behave as though emails, rescheduling requests, and confirmation messages are logistical rather than evaluative.

Recruiters are assessing communication style in real time throughout the process. A candidate who takes four days to respond to an email, rescheduled twice without clear reasons, and wrote terse messages with no greeting is creating a profile that influences how the recruiter presents them to the hiring manager. A candidate who responds promptly, communicates clearly, and handles logistics with professionalism is reinforcing their application even before the interview happens.

This does not mean excessive formality. Conversational, clear, and prompt is the right register. What it does mean: respond to every recruiting communication within 24 hours, be clear about what you need if you need to reschedule, proofread even brief emails, and use the recruiter's name.

6. The Reason Candidates Get Rejected Is Often Not What They Think

When candidates receive rejection feedback, they typically attribute it to a skill gap or a credential issue. In reality, the most common reasons for rejection after a screen or interview are: cultural fit assessment, communication style, the way the candidate talked about previous employers, or a candidate further down the shortlist who was simply a slightly stronger match for something specific.

Understanding this matters because it changes how you approach what is and is not worth improving. Practicing answers to competency questions is useful. But so is examining how you talk about your previous manager, how you describe a role that ended badly, and how you present yourself in the thirty minutes before and after the formal interview when you think you are not being evaluated.

Ask for specific feedback wherever you can. Not all recruiters will provide it, but many will share something useful if asked professionally and without pressure: "I really appreciated the process — would you be willing to share any specific feedback on where I could have been stronger?"

7. Salary Expectations: Be Specific and Do Your Research

Vague answers to salary questions — "I'm open," "whatever is fair for the role," "competitive with market" — are not as neutral as candidates think. From the recruiter's perspective, a candidate who cannot articulate their own market value either has not thought it through or is avoiding the conversation to maintain flexibility. Neither creates a strong impression.

Research your target salary range before any recruiter conversation and be prepared to state a specific number or narrow range. Use resources like Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, Levels.fyi for tech roles, and industry salary surveys. Know whether you are targeting a specific number because it represents your current package, your market rate, or your aspiration — and be honest about which.

Recruiters appreciate directness on compensation. It allows them to assess fit with the role's budget quickly, which saves everyone time. A candidate who says "I am looking for a base in the £75,000–£85,000 range based on my current role and market benchmarks" is a candidate they can work with.

8. Lack of Research Is Visible and Damaging

Recruiters and hiring managers can tell immediately when a candidate has not researched the company, and it creates a specific type of negative impression: this person is not genuinely interested in us, they are just looking for any role. That impression is hard to recover from within a thirty-minute screen.

Minimum research for any screen: know what the company does and who their customers are, know the main product or service, know one recent news item (funding, launch, expansion, partnership), and have a genuine answer to "why this company specifically."

Deeper research for interviews: understand the competitive landscape, have a view on the company's strategic direction, know the names of the leadership team, and be able to reference something specific about the team or product that you find genuinely interesting.

The candidates who get hired are almost always the ones who are clearly genuinely excited about the specific company, not just the role type. That excitement is evidenced by preparation.

9. The Follow-Up Email After an Interview Is Not Optional

Many candidates do not send a thank-you note after an interview. This is a missed opportunity at best and a negative signal at worst. In hiring cultures where the follow-up is expected (most professional and knowledge-work environments), its absence is noticed.

The note does not need to be long — three to four sentences is sufficient. Reference something specific from the conversation. Express your continued interest directly. Thank them for their time. Send it within 24 hours.

If you interviewed with multiple people, send individual notes to each, with different specific references from each conversation. This level of detail communicates attention and genuine engagement. It almost always sets you apart.

See how NextCV tailors your CV to match the job posting

10. The Candidates Who Get Hired Are the Ones Who Are Easiest to Hire

This sounds circular, but it is one of the most consistent patterns in recruiting. All other things being roughly equal, the candidate who is clearest about what they want, most responsive during the process, most prepared for each stage, and most straightforward about their situation is the one who gets the offer.

This is not about being the most impressive candidate. It is about reducing friction at every point: your CV is easy to evaluate, your screen is efficient and well-prepared, your interviews are focused and substantive, your follow-ups arrive promptly, your references are lined up. When it comes to decision time, the hiring manager's mental picture of you is "highly capable and easy to work with," rather than "impressive but complicated."

Process the whole job search as a communication exercise. Every touchpoint is a piece of evidence about how you operate as a professional. Make that evidence compelling at every stage, from the CV the recruiter opens to the email you send after the final interview.

Ready to build your tailored CV?

Paste any job posting and get a CV optimized for that specific role — in seconds.

Try NextCV free