By Phred Steer, Recruiting Expert at TYP Group  

Have you ever applied for a job that seemed perfect – only to hear nothing, ever again? 

You’re not alone. From scammy Whatsapp “dream roles” to fake job adverts designed to harvest CV’s that were never real, the epidemic of fake & misleading job opportunities is now one of the greatest threats facing the recruitment system. 

This isn’t new – but across my 30-year career, especially in last 5 years, I’ve watched it intensify, thanks to automation, generative AI, and shifting marketing pressures. 

The Tactics Becoming Ubiquitous  

Here’s what we’re seeing more frequently and more sneaky in the field: 

When you combine all these, what you have is a trust crisis in recruitment for both candidates and credible employers. 

 And candidates aren’t imagining this. The data proves it: 

  📊 The Data Doesn’t Lie 

 Candidates aren’t imagining this, the evidence is stark: 

 These aren’t marginal anomalies, they are systemic distortions. 

 💰 Why Inflated Salaries & “Unicorn Roles” Should Raise Alarms 

 Consider the scenario: a Seed or Series A startup advertises a CMO role in the UK with a package of £190,000–£220,000. Here’s why that alone demands scrutiny: 

  1. Early-stage economics are lean. Founders often operate on tight personal budgets. Paying that kind of cash early is rarely sustainable. 
  1. Bait-and-switch tactics. The job may lure attention with high salary, but when you dig into the equity component or performance conditions, the real payout shrinks drastically. 
  1. Misaligned expectations. The organisation often needs a “builder” someone used to ambiguity and scrappiness, not a big-company exec used to layered teams and process. 
  1. Optics over substance. Inflated ads can create market buzz or give the impression of scale, regardless of whether the role is genuinely backed. 

 When you see compensation figures that outstrip realistic benchmarks for stage, team size, and fund runway, that’s a major red flag. 

 🔍 Sector-Specific Pressure Points 

 While the problem permeates broadly, some sectors are especially vulnerable: 

🔍 Sector-Specific Impact 

 The damage isn’t equal across industries: 

 🌍 Why This Crisis Matters Deeply 

🌍 Why This Matters 

 The result? 

 And critically — this disproportionately affects younger jobseekers. Over 50% of job scam victims are aged 18-34, the very group building the next wave of skills and careers.  

How We Can Shift the Market 

 Platforms like ours (currently in the making) and trusted agencies have a role to play: 

  How an Ethical Shift Could Rebalance the Market 

 At TYP Group, we see a path forward. Here’s how we  and others can help reset trust: 

 For Platforms & Tech Providers 

 For Recruitment Agencies & Employers 

 For Candidates 

 🧭 Final Thought: Reclaiming Trust in Talent Markets 

Fake, inflated, or ghost job postings don’t just hurt individual jobseekers, they strain the entire recruitment ecosystem. If unchecked, they corrode trust, make talent translucent, and trash signal-to-noise ratios. 

But there is hope. With strong standards, shared accountability, and the right tools, we can flip the narrative. Real roles should rise above the noise and real talent should get the respect (and compensation) they deserve. 

👉 If you’re a candidate or an employer and you’d like to discuss what to watch out for or how TYP Group is building safer pathways, you can Be part of the mission by joining our mailing list to stay close to the journey, get early access, and help us reshape recruitment together: enquiries@typgroup.org

Or this:

🔗 Get Involved 

If you’re a candidate, 👉 follow our page or join our mailing list to stay informed, spot red flags, and access genuine opportunities.

If you’re a company, 👉 partner with us to raise hiring standards and rebuild trust in recruitment.

📩 Join the mission: enquiries@typgroup.org