Most recruiters know the power of LinkedIn’s “Open to Work” banner, but relying on a single flag is like reading only one chapter of a novel. In fact, ML/AI engineers leave their roles for a host of reasons that show up in subtle online behaviours: profile edits, promotion dates, endorsement patterns and more. This article unpacks the concept of digital body language, how engineers’ online footprints reveal their career intentions, and shows you how to combine multiple signals to predict and engage top talent in a way that’s both timely and tailored.
1. What Is Digital Body Language?
Digital body language refers to the constellation of online actions, such as profile updates, activity spikes, skill endorsements, that serve as behavioural proxies for a candidate’s readiness to explore new opportunities. Van Esch et al. (2017) coined the term to capture how “profile edits” and “status updates” act like non-verbal cues in recruitment.
Rather than a blunt instrument, these signals form a nuanced picture of candidate momentum and when interpreted correctly, they can boost your response rates by focusing outreach on engineers genuinely open to dialogue.
2. Why “Open to Work” Alone Falls Short
LinkedIn’s “Open to Work” toggle is the most visible signal, but it captures only a fraction (~15%) of engineers about to switch roles. In our Bay Area sample:
This gap means that over half of imminent job-seekers fly under the “Open to Work” radar. Relying solely on that flag risks missing:
Our analysis of 2,830 Bay Area ML/AI engineer profiles uncovers two standout behavioural predictors:
Signal |
Effect on Churn |
Open_to_Work_Inferred |
+135% hazard of leaving HR = 2.35 |
Days Since Last Job-Search Activity |
Each 30-day decrease ↗ 45% odds of moving |
Hazard Ratio (HR) quantifies how much more likely someone is to leave at any point in time (Cox model).
Odds Ratio (OR) measures likelihood of switching within six months (Logistic regression).
Importantly, other timeline events matter too:
Together, these findings demonstrate that behavioural signals, when read in combination, offer a far richer early-warning system than “Open to Work” alone.
To decode digital body language effectively, follow a three-layered approach:
By layering these signals, you can compute a Candidate Readiness Score, a simple index that weights each behavioural cue (e.g., 3 pts for Open_to_Work, 2 pts for recent profile edit, –1 pt for promotion < 180 days), and rank your outreach queue accordingly.
Step 1: Weekly Scan
– Pull all ML/AI profiles with either Open_to_Work_Inferred = 1 or profile edits in the past 30 days.
Step 2: Score & Segment
– Assign points for each signal; segment into:
Step 3: Tailored Messaging
Segment |
Message Focus |
Channel |
Hot Leads |
“I saw you just updated your TensorFlow skills, let’s talk about a role that values that expertise.” |
InMail + Email |
Warm Leads |
“Congrats on your recent promotion! In 3 months, we should revisit opportunities focused on career growth.” |
InMail follow-up |
Watchlist |
“Looks like your startup just closed Series B, would love to share how we support equity upside.” |
Email (enriched) |
Step 4: Feedback & Iterate
– Track reply, interview and offer rates by segment
– A/B test subject lines (“Equity-driven AI roles” vs. “Senior ML engineer growth path”)
– Refine signal weights based on real-world conversion
Digital body language transcends the blunt “Open to Work” indicator, unlocking a multidimensional portrait of candidate readiness. By combining profile edits, timeline triggers and contextual signals, backed by robust cohort analysis, you’ll shift from scattergun outreach to laser-focused engagement. The result? Faster time-to-fill, higher quality pipelines and a reputation as a recruiter who truly understands what makes ML/AI engineers click.
What You Can Test Next