
Post: What Is a Candidate Communication SLA? Definition and Examples
A candidate communication SLA is a written commitment that defines, for each hiring stage, the maximum time a candidate waits for a response, who owns that response, and a no-silence rule that guarantees a message before the window closes. It turns vague intentions into enforceable standards. Building one is covered in Stop Ghosting Candidates: the HR communication playbook.
Definition
A candidate communication SLA is a service-level agreement applied to the candidate experience. Each stage gets a maximum response time, a named owner, and a rule that no candidate sits in silence past that window.
How It Works
You list every hiring stage, assign a response-time target and an owner to each, and load those targets into your ATS as timers. When a candidate approaches a window, the system nudges the owner and messages the candidate. The step-by-step SLA build walks the full process.
Why It Matters
An SLA is the mechanism that prevents candidate ghosting. Ghosting happens because communication has no deadline or owner; an SLA supplies both. Without it, silence is the default; with it, on-time communication is enforced.
Key Components
- Response-time target: the maximum wait per stage.
- Named owner: one accountable person per stage.
- No-silence rule: a holding message before any window closes.
- Enforcement: ATS timers and triggers, not memory.
Example SLAs
| Stage | Target | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Application | Immediate auto-acknowledgment | System |
| Screening decision | 5 business days | Recruiter |
| Post-interview status | 48 hours | Recruiter |
| Final decision | Fixed window post-interview | Hiring manager |
Related Terms
A no-silence rule is the core principle inside an SLA. The no-silence escalation path is how the SLA gets enforced when a stage breaches.
Common Misconceptions
One misconception is that an SLA forces fast yes/no decisions — it does not. It forces communication, even if that message is “still under consideration, next update Friday.” Another is that an SLA is a policy document. A document changes nothing; an SLA encoded as ATS timers changes everything.
Expert Insight: The difference between an SLA that works and one that does not is whether it lives in a trigger or a PDF. I have seen beautifully written communication standards sit on a shared drive while candidates kept getting ghosted, because nothing enforced them. Encode the SLA into your ATS as timers and the standard enforces itself. A wish becomes a guarantee.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a candidate communication SLA?
A candidate communication SLA is a written standard defining the maximum time a candidate waits for a response at each hiring stage, who owns that response, and a no-silence rule. It converts good intentions into an enforceable commitment.
Why do you need a candidate communication SLA?
Without an SLA, candidate communication has no deadline or owner, so it falls through under load and candidates get ghosted. An SLA assigns both, which is what makes reliable, on-time communication possible.
How is a candidate communication SLA enforced?
Through ATS timers and triggers that nudge owners and fire candidate messages automatically. Enforcement lives in the system rather than in anyone’s memory, which is what makes the SLA real.

