What is Workable?
Workable is one of the most widely used applicant tracking systems in the world, particularly popular with small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs) in the 10–500 employee range. Over 30,000 companies across more than 100 countries use Workable to manage their recruiting.
You can identify Workable as the ATS behind a job application if:
- The application form URL contains "apply.workable.com" or "jobs.workable.com"
- Your confirmation email came from a workable.com address
- The careers page uses Workable's standard application widget
Workable is common across a wide range of industries — technology, marketing agencies, professional services, retail, and more. Because it is primarily used by SMBs rather than large enterprises, hiring timelines tend to be shorter and processes less bureaucratic than systems like SAP SuccessFactors or Oracle HCM.
Workable application status meanings
Workable uses a configurable recruiting pipeline. Employers can create custom stage names, but these are the most common standard stages you will encounter:
Applied
Your application has been submitted. The employer has received it, but no human has reviewed it yet. This is the default starting state for all Workable applications.
Sourced
This stage typically appears for candidates added directly by a recruiter (from LinkedIn, referrals, or outbound sourcing) rather than inbound applications. If you applied through a job board, you will not usually see this status.
In Review
A recruiter or hiring manager is actively reviewing your application. This is the first confirmed human touchpoint — you have moved from the unreviewed queue to active consideration. "In Review" in Workable is a stronger signal than in some other ATS systems because Workable is designed for SMBs where recruiters have smaller pipelines.
Interview (Phone Screen / First Interview / Second Interview)
You are advancing through the interview process. Workable typically shows which round you are in. If this stage appears without contact, check your email (including spam) — the recruiter should reach out within 1–2 business days.
Offer
The company has decided to make you an offer. Expect direct contact from the recruiter with compensation details.
Hired
Offer accepted and hire confirmed.
Disqualified / Rejected
Your application has been removed from consideration. Workable allows employers to send rejection emails, though not all do — you may see this status change before or without receiving an email.
Withdrawn
You or the employer withdrew your application.
Workable status reference table
| Status | What it means | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Applied | Submitted; awaiting human review | Wait 1–2 weeks before following up |
| In Review | Recruiter actively reviewing your application | Good sign — expect contact or decision within 1–2 weeks |
| Phone Screen | Moving to initial screening call | Check email and spam for scheduling link |
| Interview | Advancing to interview round | Prepare — contact coming within 1–2 days |
| Offer | Job offer extended | Expect recruiter contact with details |
| Hired | Offer accepted; process complete | Onboarding begins |
| Disqualified | Not selected | Continue applying elsewhere |
How long does Workable hiring take?
Workable is primarily used by SMBs, which generally move faster than enterprise employers:
Application to first human contact: 5–14 days for most Workable-using employers. Smaller companies (under 50 employees) may move in 3–7 days; growing mid-size companies may take 2–3 weeks.
In Review to Interview: 1–2 weeks.
Full interview process: 1–3 weeks across 2–4 rounds.
Total application to offer: 3–6 weeks is typical. Some fast-moving SMBs close hiring in 2–4 weeks for non-specialised roles.
If your status has been "Applied" for more than 2 weeks with no change, the role may have received high volume or the hiring manager is in a busy period. A brief follow-up after 2 weeks is appropriate for SMBs — they tend to be more responsive to direct outreach than large enterprises.
How to follow up on a Workable application
Workable does not provide candidates with a self-service status portal for inbound applications. Your status updates come via email or, in some cases, through the application confirmation page.
If you need to follow up:
1. Check the original job posting for recruiter contact information or a company email
2. Go to the company website and find the "Contact" or "Careers" page for recruiter details
3. Use LinkedIn to identify the recruiter or hiring manager for the team
4. Send a brief, polite follow-up email after 2 weeks of no contact
For the follow-up email, keep it to 3–4 sentences: your name, the role you applied for, the date you applied, and a brief restatement of interest. Do not mention that you are checking on a status — frame it as confirming receipt and expressing continued interest.