Candidate feedback on recruitment process: Samples, templates, and what to send
Sample candidate experience surveys, ready-to-send interview feedback messages, and best practices grounded in research on candidate fairness perceptions.
Candidate feedback on the recruitment process runs in two directions. There's the feedback you collect from candidates about how your hiring process felt to them, and the feedback you give to candidates after an interview.
Getting both ends right is important for improving your hiring process and strengthening your employee branding. And research sheds a light on the stakes: a study published in Future Business Journal found that four recruitment metrics, time to fill, time to hire, application completion rate, and offer acceptance rate, all significantly influence candidate experience, and that candidate experience partially mediates the link between recruitment efficiency and brand reputation.
In other words, how candidates feel about your process as a recruiter or in-house hiring manager is what carries operational quality into your employer brand.
This article gives you both sides of the feedback equation. Here's what's covered:
A question bank organized into the five dimensions of research consistently links to candidate experience, ready to mix and match across stages
Three pre-built sample surveys for the post-application, post-interview, and post-offer moments
Six sample feedback messages for the trickier scenarios, from early-stage rejections to replying when a candidate asks why they didn't get the role
Best practices grounded in what the research shows actually move candidate perceptions
Sample candidate feedback survey questions for your recruitment process
Fyxer organizes your candidate threads and drafts replies so you spend less time in email and more time making decisions
Before the question bank, a quick note on what the research suggests is worth asking. A study in the Journal of Management & Organization, drawing on data from over 500 mid-level candidates across two studies, found that timely communication of decisions strongly affects candidates' satisfaction, perceptions of fairness, intent to reapply, and likelihood of recommending the company. The effect was greatest in the early stages, when most teams are slowest.
That maps to a clear principle for survey design: ask candidates about the things research has shown actually drive their experience. The questions below are grouped into five dimensions that consistently show up in candidate-reaction studies.
Question bank, organized by field
You can mix and match these depending on which stage of your process you're surveying. There’s no need to include all of them (in fact, you should actively avoid making the survey too long; that’ll probably kill response rates). Aim for 3 questions from each field at most.
Each dimension uses a 1-5 Likert scale unless noted otherwise.
1. Process clarity How well candidates understood what was happening and what was coming next.
a) The job description gave me a clear picture of the role and what success would look like. b) I understood what each stage of the interview process would involve before it began. c) I knew who to contact if I had questions during the process. d) It was clear when I should expect to hear back at each stage.
2. Communication timeliness How fast and consistently your team kept candidates updated. This is the dimension that the research above found to have the largest effect on outcomes.
a) I received a response to my application within a reasonable time frame. b) Updates between stages arrived when promised. c) If timelines changed, I was told why.
How long, in days, did it take to receive a decision after your final interview? (open numeric)
3. Interpersonal treatment How candidates felt recruiters and interviewers treated them.
a) The recruiter treated me with respect throughout the process. b) Interviewers were prepared and had clearly reviewed my background. c) I felt comfortable asking questions during interviews. d) The tone of all communication, written and verbal, felt professional.
4. Opportunity to perform Whether candidates felt the process actually let them show what they could do. This is one of the strongest predictors of perceived fairness in the academic literature.
a) The interview questions gave me a fair chance to demonstrate my skills and experience. b) Any tests, assessments, or work samples felt relevant to the actual job. c) I had enough time to answer interview questions properly.
If we were to do the process again, is there anything you wish you had been asked? (open text)
5. Overall experience and brand impact The summary measures, including the candidate Net Promoter Score (cNPS), which lets you track changes in candidate sentiment over time.
Based on this experience, how likely are you to recommend applying to [Company] to a friend or colleague? (0 to 10 scale, cNPS)
How likely are you to apply to [Company] again in the future? (1 to 5)
What's one thing we did well during your hiring process? (open text)
What's one thing we could have done better? (open text)
Pre-built sample surveys
We’ve shared three concise survey samples below, drawn from the bank above and tied to the moment they're sent. Each is short enough to encourage high completion rates (a survey response rate above 30 percent usually requires keeping it under five minutes).
Survey 1: Post-application
Send to anyone who applied, hired, or not, within 48 hours of their application status changing. Anonymous responses.
Thanks for applying to [Company]. We'd like five minutes of your time to help us improve how we run the hiring process.
- The job description gave me a clear picture of the role. (1 to 5) - The application process was easy to complete. (1 to 5) - I received a response within a reasonable time frame. (1 to 5) - The recruiter treated me with respect. (1 to 5) - Based on this experience, how likely are you to recommend applying to [Company] to a friend? (0 to 10)
What's one thing we could improve? (open text)
Survey 2: Post-interview
Send within 48 hours of the final interview, regardless of outcome. Anonymous responses.
Thanks for interviewing with us. Your honest feedback helps us hire better and treat people better. This will take five minutes.
- I understood what each stage of the interview process would involve before it began. (1 to 5) - Updates between stages arrived when promised. (1 to 5) - Interviewers were prepared and had clearly reviewed my background. (1 to 5) - The interview questions gave me a fair chance to demonstrate my skills. (1 to 5) - Any assessments or work samples felt relevant to the actual job. (1 to 5) - How likely are you to recommend applying to [Company] to a friend? (0 to 10)
What's one thing we did well? (open text)
What's one thing we could have done better? (open text)
Survey 3: Post-offer (accepted)
Send the week the candidate accepts, before their start date.
Welcome to the team. Before things get busy, we'd love your honest take on how hiring went. This helps us give the next candidate the same experience, or a better one.
- From application to offer, the process moved at a reasonable pace. (1 to 5) - The information I received about salary, role, and benefits was clear. (1 to 5) - I felt the people I met were a good representation of the team I'm joining. (1 to 5)
What was the strongest moment of your candidate experience? (open text)
What nearly made you say no? (open text)
Survey 4: Post-offer (declined)
Send within a week of the candidate declining. Keep it short; the response rate will already be low.
Thanks for letting us know. We'd really value a few minutes of your time to understand what could have gone differently.
What was the main reason you declined? (multiple choice: compensation, role scope, team fit, company direction, accepted another offer, other)
At any point, did anything in the process make you less interested in the role? (open text)
Is there anything we could have done that would have changed your decision? (open text)
Would you consider applying to [Company] again in the future? (yes / maybe / no)
Sample feedback to give candidates
These are sample templates for responding to candidates; the general structure leads with the decision, offers one or two specific reasons, and signs off with the next steps.
1. Rejection after the application screen
Short. Honest.
Subject: Update on your application for [Role] at [Company]
Hi [Name],
Thanks for applying to the [Role] role at [Company]. After reviewing your application alongside others we received, we've decided not to move forward at this stage.
We know application updates often arrive late or not at all, so we’re closing the loop quickly. Thanks for the time you put in. We'll keep your details on file for future roles that match your background.
Best, [Recruiter name]
2. Rejection after first-round interview
Specific enough to be useful, short enough to actually get sent.
Subject: Following up on your interview for [Role]
Hi [Name],
Thanks for taking the time to meet with [Interviewer name] last [day]. After the interview, we've decided to move the other candidates forward to the next round.
The panel was looking for someone with deeper hands-on experience in [specific skill or domain], and based on the conversation, we felt other candidates were closer to that profile. Your strengths in [specific positive] came across clearly, and we'd encourage you to apply for future roles where that's more central.
Wishing you the best with the rest of your search.
[Recruiter name]
3. Rejection after final round
Longer, more substantive. The candidate has invested real time, so the message should reflect that.
Subject: Decision on the [Role] position
Hi [Name],
Thanks again for spending so much time with our team over the past [duration]. The decision was close, but we've offered the role to another candidate.
Your work on [specific example] was one of the strongest portfolio walkthroughs we saw, and your approach to [specific topic] sparked a useful internal conversation about how we think about that ourselves.
If a role opens up in the future that we expect to be a good fit for you, I'll personally reach out. And if you'd like a more detailed debrief on the interview itself, I'm happy to set up 20 minutes next week.
Given how the panel responded to your work and the depth you showed across the rounds, I have no doubt you'll land somewhere strong.
[Recruiter name]
4. Positive feedback alongside an offer
This one is easier to write but easier to get wrong. Be specific and limit corporate jargon.
Subject: [Role] offer
Hi [Name],
Before the formal offer lands in your inbox, we'd like to make you an offer for the [Role] position.
[Add one or two specifics that stood out across your interviews. For example: "The way you walked through [specific example] was clear and direct, and your question about [specific topic] was the one that prompted the most discussion in the team's debrief afterwards."]
Full details and paperwork on the way. Happy to jump on a call before you decide if there's anything you want to talk through.
[Recruiter name]
5. Strong candidate, no current role
The "we'd love to keep in touch" email that usually rings hollow. Make it specific.
Subject: Keeping you in mind, [Name]
Hi [Name],
Thank you for your interest. Unfortunately, we don't currently have any open positions that are the right fit for you.
We expect some roles to open in [time period, e.g., the next quarter] that could be relevant to your skills and experience in [domain]. I'll be in touch if a relevant future opportunity opens up.
[Recruiter name]
6. Replying when a rejected candidate asks for feedback
Most teams either ghost or send generic responses. A clear, kind, specific reply is rare and remembered.
Subject: Re: Feedback on my interview
Hi [Name],
Thanks for asking. Most candidates don't, and it’s a strong sign of your initiative that you did.
Two specific things from the panel's debrief. First, the technical exercise around [topic] showed solid fundamentals, but the panel was looking for someone who'd already shipped at the scale this role would require. Second, when [interviewer] asked about [topic], the answer focused on [angle] when the team was looking for [different angle]. Neither is a verdict on your skills; it’s simply where the bar landed for this specific role.
Hope that's useful. Wishing you well with the rest of your search.
[Recruiter name]
What separates feedback that lands from feedback that doesn't
There are a few principles, based on what the research suggests actually moves candidate perceptions, that you can apply in your candidate feedback. We’ve designed the templates above around these same tenets:
Send something at every stage: Silence is the worst signal. Even a one-line "we've decided not to move forward" beats nothing. The study we mentioned earlier found that the absence of communication, not the content of it, is what most damages candidate fairness perceptions in the early stages.
Match the depth of feedback to the depth of investment: For a first-round candidate, it’s usually enough to just let them know that you’re not looking to proceed with them. But for a final-round candidate, you might want to provide detailed, constructive feedback instead of something vague like “we went in a different direction.”
Speed beats polish in the early stages: A short, kind message within 48 hours does more for your employer brand than a perfect one in two weeks (The same response-time logic applies more generally to professional email etiquette). Save the carefully drafted message for the final-round candidates.
Where recruiters and hiring managers struggle in practice
The hard part is applying those principles consistently across hundreds of candidates and dozens of roles. Getting back to people at the right moment, in your voice, with the specific context that makes the message land takes time, most busy recruiters and hiring managers don't have.
That last bit is what gets cut when the pipeline is heavy. Generic feedback, sent late, is just easier to scale. It's a version of the broader email overload problem, which most professionals running high-volume inboxes are already familiar with.
According to Fyxer's Admin Burden Index 2026, a survey of 5,000 UK and US office workers, professionals already respond to an average of 29 emails a day requiring a reply, with 15% handling more than 51. For a recruiter managing multiple open roles, candidate communication is competing with everything else in that inbox.
The part that gets cut when the pipeline is heavy isn't the decision itself. It's the follow-through. Candidate threads get buried, feedback gets generic, and timing slips past the point where it matters. If your inbox is where that breakdown happens, Fyxerorganizes it by priority so active candidate threads don't disappear, and drafts replies in your voice using context from past emails and meeting notes.
And if you're running heavy pipelines and the feedback piece is consistently slipping, our guide to AI recruitment tools covers the broader landscape.
Candidate feedback FAQs
How do you give feedback to a candidate who didn't get the job?
Lead with the decision, give one or two specific reasons, and end with what's next. Keep it short for early-stage rejections, longer for late-stage ones. Use specifics rather than generic phrases. "The panel was looking for deeper experience in [specific area]" tells the candidate something. "We went with another candidate" doesn’t provide any information.
What should a candidate experience survey include?
Five dimensions cover most of what the research has shown matters: process clarity, communication timeliness, interpersonal treatment, opportunity to perform, and overall experience. Three to four questions per dimension keep the survey under five minutes, the threshold above which response rates collapse. Always include a candidate's Net Promoter Score to track changes over time.
How quickly should you send candidate feedback after an interview?
Within 48 hours for early-stage rejections, within a week for final-round decisions. The 2025 Barattucci et al. study found that timing matters most in the early stages, when most teams are slowest. A two-line rejection sent the same day beats a paragraph sent two weeks later.
Should you give detailed feedback to candidates rejected at the resume stage?
Detailed feedback at the resume stage is rarely worth the time, since you don't have enough data to make it specific. A short, prompt acknowledgment of the decision is enough. Save the substantive feedback for candidates who've actually interviewed, where you have the material to say something constructive.
What's the difference between candidate feedback and a candidate experience survey?
Candidate feedback is the broader umbrella, covering both what you tell candidates about their performance and what they tell you about your process. A candidate experience survey is one specific tool for collecting the second of those: structured input from candidates about how the process felt to them.