How to Reach Out to a Recruiter on LinkedIn

What to say, what to avoid, and message templates that get replies — for connection requests, InMail, and follow-up messages.

Should You Message Recruiters Directly on LinkedIn?

Yes — and it's increasingly expected. Recruiters spend significant time on LinkedIn and actively use the platform to find and engage candidates. A professional, direct message from a relevant candidate is not an imposition — it's exactly what the platform is built for.

The caveat: the message has to be relevant, brief, and professional. Recruiters at active agencies or in-house talent teams may receive dozens of unsolicited messages per week. The messages that get read and replied to are those that clearly explain who you are, what you're looking for, and why you're reaching out to this specific recruiter.

The LoopCV Cold Email to Recruiter Generator produces professional outreach messages for three scenarios: speculative outreach, about a specific job posting, and via a referral. Free, no sign-up.

The Anatomy of a Good LinkedIn Message to a Recruiter

A message to a recruiter on LinkedIn should:

1. Open with your name and what you do (1 sentence)
2. State your purpose — why you're reaching out, what you're looking for (1–2 sentences)
3. Make yourself relevant — why you're a candidate worth considering, briefly (1–2 sentences)
4. Make it easy to respond — a specific question or a clear next step (1 sentence)

The length: 4–6 sentences. LinkedIn messages should be short. Recruiters read on the go — a wall of text gets closed.

The mistake: writing a message that's entirely about what you want ("I'm looking for X, can you help me?") with no indication of what you bring. Recruiters help candidates who are compelling to employers — give them a reason to be interested in you.

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Message Templates for Different Scenarios

Scenario 1: Speculative outreach (no specific role)
*"Hi [Name],

I'm a [role/title] with [X] years in [industry/function] — most recently at [Company] where I [brief achievement]. I'm actively exploring new opportunities in [area] and your work recruiting for [sector/company type] caught my attention.

Would you be open to a brief conversation about the market or any relevant roles you're working on? Happy to share my CV if helpful.

Best,
[Name]"*

Scenario 2: About a specific job posting
*"Hi [Name],

I came across the [Job Title] role at [Company] you're recruiting for and wanted to reach out directly. I have [X years / specific experience] in [relevant area] and my background in [specific skill] maps closely to what the role requires.

I've applied through the portal — just wanted to introduce myself here in case it's useful. Happy to share any additional context.

Best,
[Name]"*

Scenario 3: Via a referral
*"Hi [Name],

[Mutual connection] suggested I reach out to you. I'm a [role] with [X] years of experience in [area] and I'm currently exploring senior [role type] opportunities. [Mutual connection] thought my background might be a fit for roles you work on.

Would you be open to a brief call? Happy to share my CV.

Best,
[Name]"*

Connection Request Notes

When sending a connection request to a recruiter, the 300-character note is a critical opportunity. Most candidates send blank connection requests — a note immediately differentiates you.

A strong connection note:
*"Hi [Name] — I'm a [role] with [X] years in [area], actively exploring my next move. I've applied to the [role] at [Company] and wanted to connect directly. Happy to share my background if helpful."*

or, more briefly:
*"Hi [Name] — [Mutual connection] suggested I connect. I'm a [role] looking for opportunities in [area] — would value staying in your network."*

Key rule: the note should be about what you bring, not just what you want. The recruiter asks "is this person relevant to anything I'm working on?" — your note should answer that question immediately.

Following Up After No Response

If you don't receive a response to a LinkedIn message, one follow-up after 7–10 days is appropriate. Make it brief and additive:

*"Hi [Name] — just following up on my message from last week. I understand you're busy — if the timing isn't right, no worries at all. I'm continuing my search and happy to stay in touch. Best, [Name]"*

After a second message with no response, stop. Continued follow-up after two unanswered messages creates a negative impression that's hard to reverse.

What a non-response usually means: you're not currently a fit for their active mandates, or the recruiter manages too high a volume to respond to all inbounds. It's not a personal rejection. Reconnect in a few months if your circumstances or their search volume changes.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

Should I message a recruiter on LinkedIn if I'm not connected?

Yes. You can send a connection request with a personalised note (300 characters), or if you have LinkedIn Premium, send an InMail directly. A personalised connection request note is often the better approach — it creates a low-friction entry point and most active recruiters accept connections from relevant candidates.

What should I say when reaching out to a recruiter on LinkedIn?

Who you are and what you do (1 sentence), what you're looking for (1–2 sentences), why you're relevant (1–2 sentences), and a clear next step or question (1 sentence). Total: 4–6 sentences. Relevance and brevity are the two most important qualities.

Is it OK to cold message a recruiter on LinkedIn?

Yes — as long as the message is professional, relevant, and brief. Recruiters use LinkedIn specifically to engage candidates and are generally receptive to professional outreach. The messages that get ignored are generic, overly long, or entirely focused on what the candidate wants without giving the recruiter any sense of whether this person is worth engaging.

Should I send a recruiter my CV on LinkedIn?

Offer to send it rather than attaching it unsolicited to the first message. "Happy to share my CV if that would be helpful" is professional and non-pushy. Once they express interest, send it promptly as a well-formatted PDF.

What is the best time to message a recruiter on LinkedIn?

Weekday mornings (Monday–Thursday, 8–10 AM in the recruiter's timezone) tend to see the highest reply rates for professional messages. Avoid Friday afternoons and weekends — messages sent then often get buried by Monday morning. This is a marginal factor compared to message quality, but worth considering if you have a choice.

Should I thank a recruiter on LinkedIn after an interview they arranged?

Yes — a brief thank-you message to the recruiter after an interview they facilitated is professional and maintains the relationship. This is separate from your thank-you to the interviewer. Keep it brief: "Just wanted to let you know the interview went well — really enjoyed speaking with [hiring manager]. Thanks for setting it up."

Is there a template for cold messaging recruiters?

Yes — the LoopCV Cold Email to Recruiter Generator produces professional outreach messages for three scenarios: speculative outreach, about a specific job posting, and via a referral. Subject line and full message body included. Free, no sign-up required.

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