Norco Technologies Blog
LinkedIn Social Engineering: How to Shield Your Team from Fake Job Scams
The FTC describes scammers impersonating well-known companies and then steering targets toward actions that create leverage. These actions include handing over sensitive personal information or sending money for “equipment” or other upfront costs.
Once someone is rushed into treating the process as real, the scam doesn’t need to be technically sophisticated. It just needs the victim to keep moving.
The Scam Pattern Most Teams Miss
1. A polished approach on LinkedIn
The profile looks credible enough, the role sounds plausible, and the message is written in a professional tone. The job post itself may still be oddly generic, though.
Amoria Bond notes that fake job postings often “lack details” and lean on broad language to catch as many people as possible.
2. A quick push off-platform
The conversation shifts to email, WhatsApp/Telegram, or a “recruitment portal” link. That shift is important because it removes the built-in friction of LinkedIn’s environment and makes it easier to send links, files, and instructions.
3. A credibility wrapper: “assessment”, “interview pack”, or “onboarding”
Airswift flags link/attachment requests and urgency tactics as common red flags. The story is usually something like: “Download this assessment,” “Review these onboarding steps,” or “Log in here to schedule.”
Tag AppsMake decisions visible and repeatable by tagging apps.
Microsoft explicitly calls tagging apps as sanctioned or unsanctioned an important step, because it lets you filter, track progress, and drive consistent action over time.
4. The pivot: money, sensitive info, or account takeover
Scammers impersonate well-known companies and then ask for things legitimate employers typically don’t: payment for “equipment” or early requests for personal information.
Another variation is more subtle: “verification” steps that are really designed to steal identity details or compromise accounts.
5. Pressure to keep moving
If someone hesitates, the scam leans on urgency: “limited slots,” “fast-track hiring,” “complete this today.” That’s why Forbes frames the key skill as slowing down and checking details, because the scam depends on momentum.
Red Flags Checklist for Staff
Here are the red flags to look out for.
Red flags in the job posting
The role is oddly vague or overly broad. Generic responsibilities, unclear reporting lines, and “we’ll share details later” language are common in fake listings.
The company's presence doesn’t match the brand name. Thin company pages, inconsistent logos/branding, or a web presence that feels incomplete are worth pausing on.
The process is “too easy, too fast.” If the listing implies immediate hiring with minimal steps, treat it as suspicious.
Red flags in recruiter behaviour
They push you off LinkedIn quickly. Moving to WhatsApp/Telegram or personal email early is a common tactic.
They use a personal email address or unusual contact details. Be specifically cautious of recruiters using free webmail accounts instead of a company domain.
They avoid verification. If they dodge basic questions, treat that as a signal, not a scheduling issue
Hard-stop requests
Any request for money or fees. Application fees, equipment purchases, “training costs”, gift cards, crypto, that’s a hard stop.
Requests for sensitive personal info early. Bank details, identity documents, tax forms, or “background checks” before a real interview process is established.
Requests for verification codes. If anyone asks you to read back a one-time code sent to your phone/email, assume they’re trying to take over an account.
Requests for non-public company information like org charts, internal system details, client lists, invoice processes and security tools. Look out for requisitions for anything beyond what a recruiter would reasonably need.
Stop Scams With Simple Defaults
LinkedIn recruitment scams don’t succeed because staff are careless. They succeed because the outreach looks normal, the process feels familiar, and the next step is always framed as urgent.
The fix isn’t turning everyone into an investigator. It’s setting simple defaults that make scams harder to complete: slow down before clicking, verify the recruiter and role through official channels, keep conversations on-platform until identity checks out, and treat money requests, code requests, and early personal data demands as hard stops.
When those habits are standardised, the scam loses its leverage.
Reach out to us today to make sure you have the latest tools to fight this and other types.Comments