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4 Reasons Your Offer Letter May Be Rejected and How to Avoid Them All

May 29, 2020
 
iCIMS Staff
5 min read
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Did you ever think you’d become a professional juggler? The last few months of new restrictions, school closings, remote ways of working, and financial uncertainty improved that skill for everyone. There’s plenty to stress about, but making an offer doesn’t need to be one of them.

You’ve likely heard the buzz about how tools like virtual career fair platforms, video interviewing, and text outreach saved many hiring teams during COVID-19, but nothing is certain until the job offer is signed. The formal offer letter is the much-needed solidification for both candidates and employers in uncertain times.

The offer process you knew in the past may not survive the current virtual standards but read on to learn why that is and how you can get ahead of it right away.

 

4 Reasons Your Offer Letter May Be Rejected and How to Avoid That

 

1. Timing

There may be fewer job openings, but quality of talent and speed of hire still define success. Nearly half of 2020 college graduates expect an offer letter within three weeks of applying to a job. And roles that require a specific skillset still attract a level of competition from other employers, so now is not the time to let up on fast processes. Every bottleneck in approvals and template creation still pose risk to you securing your best-fit candidate.

 

2. Communication

While a fast process is ideal, even speed can’t secure highly specialized candidates. They’re all too familiar with the black hole of recruitment and this is your opportunity to stand apart by treating them like a person rather than a req. Life right now is confusing and chaotic, so regularly sharing updates at each step of the process prevents candidates from thinking you’ve moved on or forgotten about them. Aside from providing an excellent employer experience, timely and mobile-friendly updates about what’s happening behind the scenes ensure when the offer does arrive, it’s happily (and quickly) accepted.

Here’s a great resource to dive deeper into modern talent outreach in this weird time.

 

3. Experience 

While the offer letter is technically a contract, it doesn’t need to be all transactional. Don’t let the fact that the power has shifted back to employers change the authenticity of your employer brand.

If social distancing has shined a light on anything, it’s the power of connection. As unemployment numbers rise, candidates are more inclined to stay in a job longer—if you give them a reason to. To make that long-term commitment, your new hire will be looking closely at how they are treated along the way. That can be as simple as a dedicated point of contact that stays in touch and offers a personalized delivery of the offer with clear instructions on next steps. Taking it a step further, provide a mobile-friendly view of the offer letter and an option to e-sign from anywhere your talent may be.

If the newest members of our workforce are any indicator, employers will want to stay on top of the 59% that want to complete all intake paperwork digitally. Read our new Class of 2020 Report to see what else we found out about their expectations.

 

4. Details

A new job could mean a fresh start in a new remote role, a different career path, or job security after months of being unemployed. A signed offer now defines the next chapter of this unconventional journey, and it is as critical as ever. For example, Heidi Kasemir, a 31-year-old developer, took the opportunity to leave San Francisco with a 25% pay cut to work remotely full time from Salt Lake City. She did that because the offer was the right fit for her next move, telling The Wall Street Journal “I can very much see myself having a higher quality of life living somewhere else.”

Use your offer letter to highlight employee perks, work-life balance, total rewards, and culture that close the deal.

 

Getting to “Yes”: A quick checklist to follow every time for optimal results

Automated and virtual offer letter technology help employers avoid these snags. By simply using an offer management solution that works with their existing talent acquisition technology stack, Peet’s Coffee not only avoided these common offer letter pitfalls, they also:

  • Cut approval times by 3.5 days
  • Cut offer acceptance time by 50%
  • Dropped time to perform background check from 4 days down to 1

Read their full story of talent acquisition success here.

 

You can achieve more from your offer process by following a few simple best practices:

  • Be transparent with talent on what they can expect from you before the process begins
  • Deliver on a verbal offer within minutes with a prepared formal letter
  • Tackle bottlenecks in revisions and approvals
  • Automate the offer process with pre-approved templates to reduce risk of mistakes
  • Keep offer letters clean and professional to reflect the feel and tone of your employer brand
  • Provide regular updates to candidates about where they are in the process
  • Track offer status to send reminders and manage approvals in one centralized system
  • Seek out feedback from declined offers to bring back insight to your hiring team
  • Learn from trends in reporting to identify bottlenecks before they cost you a hire

For more tips on crafting yes-worthy offer letters (and establishing processes that work better for your team) download our Definitive Guide to an Optimized Offer Letter.

offer guide button

Reviewed for accuracy on February 25, 2021, by Danielle McClow. 

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