Millions of Gen Zers are struggling to find stable work, yet recruiters across the U.S. are seeing an unprecedented trend: applicants disappearing mid-process, skipping interviews, and outright ignoring job offers. The phenomenon, widely known as “ghosting,” is baffling hiring managers. But psychologists and career experts say they’ve found a clue, and a possible fix.
It’s not laziness. It’s phone anxiety.
Ghosting Is the Norm, Not the Exception
According to new labor reports, unemployment among young adults ages 18 to 24 is significantly higher than the national average. But instead of chasing every opportunity, many Gen Z job seekers are disengaging altogether, especially when employers reach out via phone.
Recruiters say it’s common for candidates to go silent after applying, miss scheduled calls, or ignore voicemails altogether. Some are even ghosting on the first day of work.
“It’s like they vanish into thin air,” said one hiring manager at a national retail chain. “We’ll have a great resume, a strong initial message, then nothing.”
The Rise of Phone Anxiety
Experts say phone anxiety, an intense discomfort with phone calls, is a real and rising phenomenon among younger workers. Unlike older generations raised on landlines, Gen Z grew up texting, voice messaging, and communicating asynchronously. For many, a ringing phone triggers panic, not productivity.
“Phone calls are perceived as confrontational or overly formal,” explains Dr. Andrea Gutierrez, a workplace psychologist. “Young people worry about saying the wrong thing, being caught off guard, or sounding unprepared.”
This discomfort is amplified in high-stakes scenarios like job interviews or recruiter follow-ups.
Voice Notes: The Surprising Solution
Rather than force Gen Z to adapt to outdated communication norms, some career coaches are proposing a middle ground: voice notes.
“Voice notes are the sweet spot,” says Tina Wu, a Gen Z career consultant. “They allow for real-time tone and personality without the pressure of live dialogue. It’s more human than a text but less terrifying than a call.”
Apps like WhatsApp and Instagram already make voice messaging second nature. A few innovative employers have started accepting job applications and follow-ups via voice memos, with promising results.
Rethinking the Hiring Process
To better engage with Gen Z talent, companies are being advised to meet candidates where they are. That means ditching phone-heavy outreach in favor of:
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Asynchronous voice interviews via apps
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Text-based scheduling tools that reduce back-and-forth
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Short video intros to replace traditional cover letters
Some recruiters report higher response rates and more authentic interactions using voice-based platforms, suggesting that Gen Z isn’t disinterested, they just need a different approach.
A Cultural Shift in Communication
The ghosting issue is not solely a Gen Z problem, it’s a reflection of a generational divide in communication preferences. As the youngest generation enters the workforce in greater numbers, employers will need to adapt just as much as job seekers.
“Companies need to stop treating phone calls like the gold standard of professionalism,” says Wu. “In a digital-first world, the most effective communication isn’t the most traditional, it’s the most relatable.”