You know the drill. You've got positions to fill, deadlines breathing down your neck, and a database full of phone numbers from job boards. So you fire off texts like this:
"Good morning! This is Kate with [Company]. I found your resume on LinkedIn and thought you would be a good fit for a position we have."
Quick, direct, and gets results. But here's what's keeping compliance teams up at night – these cold recruiting texts are creating real legal and deliverability risks that could shut down your entire text recruiting operation. The messaging landscape has changed dramatically over the past few years, and what used to be standard practice is now walking a tightrope between effective outreach and serious violations.
If you're wondering why some of your cold texts still deliver when "experts" say they shouldn't, it's because filtering isn't perfect – yet. The 10DLC system carriers use to vet business messaging has gaps, inconsistencies, and varying enforcement levels across different carriers and regions.
Several factors explain why some cold messages still slip through:
But don't mistake this inconsistency for a green light. You're essentially speeding through an unmanned speed trap – eventually, your luck runs out. Carriers are continuously tightening enforcement, sharing violation data with each other, and implementing more sophisticated detection systems. The FCC's text message blocking requirements have made filtering even more aggressive. What works today might fail spectacularly tomorrow, taking your entire recruiting operation with it.
Two sets of rules govern your recruiting texts, and both are getting stricter every year. Understanding these isn't just about legal compliance – it's about protecting the infrastructure you rely on to reach candidates.
The CTIA is clear: You need consumer consent before sending business texts. This isn't a suggestion or industry best practice – it's a binding policy that carriers enforce with filtering systems, campaign suspensions, and complete account terminations.
The requirements are comprehensive and specific:
Carriers take this seriously because unwanted business texts generate massive complaint volumes that regulators use to justify stricter oversight. Major carriers like T-Mobile have implemented strict enforcement policies that can immediately suspend accounts sending unconsented messages. When you send unconsented messages, you're not just risking your own account – you're contributing to an industry-wide problem that affects every business trying to communicate with customers and candidates via text.
Federal law creates liability through two different paths, and both can hit recruiting texts depending on how you're sending them. The Telephone Consumer Protection Act isn't just about telemarketing – it covers any automated communication to cell phones, which includes most modern text messaging platforms.
Regulatory Update: New TCPA opt-out requirements require businesses to honor opt-out requests submitted through "any reasonable manner," not just reply texts. This includes email requests, phone calls, and other communication channels.
Recent cases give us a clearer picture of where recruiting texts stand legally, and the trends aren't encouraging for cold outreach strategies. The legal landscape is evolving rapidly as courts grapple with new messaging technologies and changing communication patterns.
Key cases that affect recruiting texts:
The pattern emerging from these cases is clear: courts will protect legitimate recruiting communications, but only when they're conducted manually and without the automation that triggers TCPA violations. Use a platform, template system, or any form of mass distribution, and you lose that protection. Legal experts note in this detailed analysis of the Andersen case that the victory was narrow – it only applied because no automation was proven and the content wasn't sales-focused.
Let's cut through the legal jargon and get specific about your situation. The answer depends entirely on your current methods, and there's no universal "safe" approach when you're operating without consent.
Industry compliance: Yes, cold recruiting texts violate CTIA and carrier policies regardless of how you send them. Full stop. Carriers expect documented consent for all business-to-consumer messaging, and they have the technical capability and regulatory authority to shut you down when they discover violations.
TCPA compliance: This depends entirely on your sending methods, but most common recruiting approaches create significant risk:
The honest answer is "probably, eventually," and the timeline is getting shorter as enforcement mechanisms improve. Understanding how filtering works helps explain why some messages still get through and why that's not a reliable long-term strategy.
Filtering systems evaluate multiple risk factors:
The 10DLC system requires campaign registration with specific use case declarations and proof of consent documentation. When you register a "hiring/recruiting" campaign, carriers expect you to demonstrate how you collect opt-ins and maintain consent records. Operating outside these expectations puts your entire messaging infrastructure at risk, not just individual campaigns.
Recent industry data shows that unconsented business messaging has significantly lower delivery rates and higher filtering risk compared to opt-in campaigns. You might think you're getting good results with cold texting, but you're likely missing a substantial percentage of your intended recipients without realizing it.
When you're deciding whether to keep sending cold recruiting texts, you need to weigh potential benefits against three distinct types of risk that can seriously damage your recruiting operation and your organization's reputation.
Legal exposure includes:
Operational exposure includes:
Brand and candidate experience damage includes:
Here's how your current recruiting approaches actually stack up against industry standards and legal requirements:
Your current method | Legal risk | Delivery risk | Compliance status | Long-term viability |
---|---|---|---|---|
Manual, one-to-one texts (no opt-in) | Medium | High | Violates carrier policy | Unsustainable |
Platform-based batch texting | High | Very high | Likely TCPA + carrier violations | Very unsustainable |
Any prerecorded/template content | Very high | Very high | Clear TCPA violation | Completely unsustainable |
Opted-in job alerts with proper disclosure | Low | Low | Compliant when done correctly | Sustainable and scalable |
The pattern is clear: approaches that rely on cold outreach might work temporarily, but they're fundamentally incompatible with current messaging infrastructure and regulatory requirements.
If you want to keep texting candidates without the legal headaches and operational disruptions, you need to fundamentally change your approach from cold outreach to consent-based communication. This isn't just about avoiding problems – it's about building a more effective recruiting system that generates better results with lower risk.
Building consent into your process means:
Proper campaign registration requires:
Messaging best practices include:
For detailed guidance on implementing these practices, check out our comprehensive SMS compliance guide, which covers everything from consent collection to message formatting requirements.
Here's opt-in language that meets current compliance standards while encouraging signups:
"Stay ahead of the competition! Check this box to receive SMS job alerts and recruiting updates from [Your Company] about opportunities that match your experience. You'll get 2-4 messages per month with insider access to new openings before they're posted publicly. Standard message and data rates apply. Reply STOP to cancel anytime, HELP for support. Full terms: [link to your SMS terms page]"
Stop asking whether cold recruiting texts are "allowed" – the regulatory environment, carrier policies, and legal precedents have already answered that question. The real question is whether you want to keep playing Russian roulette with your messaging infrastructure and legal exposure, or build a sustainable recruiting communication strategy that actually improves your results.
The transition to consent-based recruiting offers significant advantages:
Start implementing these changes systematically. Begin capturing consent from new candidates immediately, build your opted-in database gradually, and phase out cold outreach as your compliant list grows. The investment in proper consent processes pays dividends in message deliverability, legal protection, and candidate quality.
Ready to build a recruiting text program that works long-term without the compliance headaches? Start implementing consent capture today, register your campaigns with proper documentation, and stop gambling with your brand reputation and messaging infrastructure. For proven strategies that actually work, explore our SMS best practices to learn how successful organizations build sustainable, compliant recruiting programs.
Making this transition sooner rather than later will benefit your future self, your legal team, and your recruiting results.