The 3 types of recruiter messages that work
Most LinkedIn messages to recruiters are ignored because they are too long, too generic, or too obviously copy-pasted. There are three situations where recruiter outreach works well, and each requires a different approach:
1. You applied and want to follow up — short, specific, references the application
2. You're interested in a role that's posted — references the specific role and your fit
3. Cold outreach to a recruiter at a target company — expresses genuine interest in the company, not just any job
The rule for all three: under 100 words, specific, easy to respond to.
Template 1: Following up after applying
Use when: You applied through the company website or LinkedIn Jobs and want to signal interest.
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"Hi [Name],
I recently applied for the [Job Title] role at [Company] and wanted to reach out directly. I'm genuinely excited about [specific aspect of the company or role] and believe my background in [relevant skill/experience] is a strong fit.
I'd love the chance to discuss further — happy to share more if helpful.
Thank you,
[Your name]"
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Keep it under 5 sentences. Recruiters see hundreds of messages. The goal is to stand out as specific and professional, not to explain your entire career.
Template 2: Reaching out about a specific open role
Use when: You see a role posted and want to reach the recruiter before or instead of applying through the ATS.
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"Hi [Name],
I came across the [Job Title] posting at [Company] and wanted to reach out directly. I've spent [X years] in [relevant area] and have [specific relevant achievement or skill]. I think I could be a strong fit for what you're looking for.
Would you be open to a brief conversation? Happy to send over my resume.
[Your name]"
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Why this works: It's specific (names the role), demonstrates relevant experience briefly, and asks for a low-commitment next step.
Template 3: Cold outreach to a recruiter at a target company
Use when: You want to work at a specific company but may not have an open role to reference.
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"Hi [Name],
I've been following [Company]'s work in [specific area — product, market, recent news] and am genuinely interested in opportunities on the [Engineering/Marketing/etc.] side. I've spent [X years] doing [relevant experience].
I know this is a cold message — if it's not a fit right now, I'd still love to stay on your radar for future openings.
[Your name]"
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Why this works: Acknowledges it's cold (self-awareness earns goodwill), references something specific about the company, and asks for something low-commitment ("stay on your radar").
Mistakes that get your message ignored
Too long: Messages over 150 words get skimmed at best, deleted at worst. Every sentence should earn its place.
No specificity: "I'm a motivated professional looking for opportunities" tells a recruiter nothing. Reference the company, the role, or a specific experience.
Asking too much too soon: "Can we schedule a 30-minute call this week?" is too much to ask of a cold contact. Ask for a brief chat or to stay in touch.
"Just following up": The most ignored opener in recruiting. If you're following up, reference what you're following up about specifically.
Excessive flattery: "I've always dreamed of working at [Company]" reads as desperate. Specific interest in the company's work is compelling; vague admiration is not.