Application Stages

Understanding and managing application progress

Application Stages

CareerTrackr uses a status-based system to track your progress through the job application process. Understanding and using these stages helps you stay organized and identify bottlenecks.

The Seven Stages

1. Prospective

What it means: You’ve found an interesting job but haven’t applied yet.

Use this stage to:

  • Save jobs you want to research
  • Build a pipeline of opportunities
  • Track jobs you’re considering

Next actions:

  • Research the company
  • Customize your resume
  • Write a cover letter
  • Apply before the deadline

2. Applied

What it means: You’ve submitted your application.

Automatically tracked:

  • Applied date is set when you change to this status
  • Days since application are calculated

Next actions:

  • Log the application details
  • Set a follow-up reminder
  • Link the resume/cover letter versions used

3. Screening

What it means: Initial contact has been made (usually recruiter/phone screen).

Common activities:

  • Recruiter phone calls
  • HR screening interviews
  • Technical phone screens
  • Take-home assessments

Track:

  • Recruiter contact information
  • Screening call notes
  • Next steps discussed

4. Interviewing

What it means: You’re in the active interview process.

Types of interviews to track:

  • Technical interviews
  • Behavioral interviews
  • Panel interviews
  • Final rounds

Important to log:

  • Interview dates and times
  • Interviewer names and roles
  • Questions asked
  • Your impressions

5. Offer

What it means: You’ve received a job offer.

Track details:

  • Offer amount
  • Benefits package
  • Start date
  • Deadline to respond
  • Negotiation notes

Use this time to:

  • Compare multiple offers
  • Negotiate terms
  • Make your decision

6. Rejected

What it means: The application was unsuccessful.

Important to note:

  • At what stage you were rejected
  • Any feedback received
  • Lessons learned

Next steps:

  • Thank interviewers
  • Request feedback
  • Apply learnings to future applications

7. Withdrawn

What it means: You removed yourself from consideration.

Common reasons:

  • Accepted another offer
  • Role not a good fit
  • Company culture concerns
  • Compensation too low

Document why for future reference

Stage Progression

Typical Flow

Prospective → Applied → Screening → Interviewing → Offer → (Accept)
                ↓           ↓            ↓           ↓
            Rejected   Rejected     Rejected    Withdrawn

Important Notes

  • You can skip stages (e.g., Prospective → Interviewing for referrals)
  • You can move backwards (e.g., Interviewing → Screening for additional screens)
  • Some opportunities may have multiple rounds within a stage

Using Stages Effectively

Pipeline Management

  • Keep a healthy mix of opportunities at different stages
  • Don’t let all opportunities cluster in one stage
  • Aim for continuous flow through the pipeline

Time Tracking

  • Monitor how long opportunities stay in each stage
  • Identify which stages take longest
  • Set follow-up reminders based on typical timelines

Success Metrics

The dashboard tracks:

  • Response Rate: % of applications that move past Applied
  • Interview Rate: % of applications that reach Interviewing
  • Offer Rate: % of interviews that result in offers
  • Conversion Rate: % of applications resulting in offers

Stage-Specific Actions

Prospective:

  • Research company
  • Customize resume
  • Find employee connections

Applied:

  • Send thank you note
  • Connect with recruiter on LinkedIn
  • Set follow-up reminder

Screening:

  • Prepare elevator pitch
  • Research interviewers
  • Prepare questions

Interviewing:

  • Send thank you notes
  • Complete any assignments
  • Follow up on timeline

Offer:

  • Review all terms
  • Compare with other offers
  • Negotiate if appropriate

Best Practices

  1. Update Immediately: Change status as soon as something happens
  2. Add Notes: Document important details at each stage
  3. Set Reminders: Use activities to track follow-ups
  4. Link Everything: Connect related communications and activities
  5. Learn from Patterns: Review rejected applications for improvements

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • ❌ Leaving opportunities in “Applied” when you’ve been contacted
  • ❌ Not tracking why applications were rejected
  • ❌ Forgetting to update status after interviews
  • ❌ Not documenting feedback received

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