Saturday, May 30, 2020
Psst... Heres the Secret Sauce to a Brilliant Employer Brand
Psst... Heres the Secret Sauce to a Brilliant Employer Brand Your gut tells you that your employer brand is critical to your talent attraction efforts. Your co-workers and industry leaders tell you the same thing. As do white papers, candidate surveys and unbiased research. [If youâre still in doubt of all of that, this study from a few years back found that 69% of candidates wouldnât take a job with a company that had a bad reputation, even if they were unemployed. (Corporate Responsibility Magazine / Allegis Group Services Study, August 2012). ] So what makes it so important? Why is the employer brand and company reputation the No. 1 factor in many candidatesâ career decisions today? Itâs because storytelling is in our genetic code. Look throughout history and youâll find evidence of storytelling among all ancient civilizations and cultures. Itâs how we communicate. Itâs something that human beings are pre-dispositioned for â"even today when we have the attention span of goldfish. You know, maybe storytelling is actually more important today because we have the attention span of goldfish. Maybe, just maybe, weâre drawn into something real, emotional and captivating as opposed to the continual barrage of advertising and cold, impersonal attempts of companies to pull us this way or that. The secret sauce for a strong employer brand And so that leads me to the key elements of a strong employer brand. It boils down to three core ingredients: Tell good stories Share the âwhyâ Find an emotional pull Allow me to elaborate. Tell good stories As mentioned, the human race appreciates a good story. Your company and your employees have a story to tell. Your challenge is to find it. For many companies, that is directly tied to your consumer or corporate brand. What does your company do at its core? What do you sell? What do your employees make, help with, create, provide, etc.? Has your company been around for 85 years, or are you a hungry startup? All of these are factors to include in your storyâ¦but then take it one step further and discuss the employee side of that story. Take The Home Depot for example. They produce quite a number of employee stories that tie nicely back to the companyâs services and core values. Hereâs an example: Dig around your company to pull those stories out, but before firming up the themes, see the next point below. Share the âwhyâ Itâs great to understand what you offer, but to truly create a captivating employer brand, you have to dig deeper and find out why your employees do what they do. Itâs bigger than the products you sell, and chances are, other companies offer something similar, right? So what makes you unique? Why do your people come to work every day? There is a huge cross-section of job seekers who are looking for meaningful, purposeful work. Ping pong tables are fun, but they donât make your employer brand. Thereâs something bigger here (I hope!). Google is a great example of doing meaningful work. Google didnât just create a search engine. They put the worldâs information at your fingertips. And, that access to information can literally change lives. Itâs not what you do; itâs WHY you do it that matters. Find that story; I cannot emphasize this enough. Thatâs the heart of your employer brand. Find an emotional pull And, speaking of heart, the last ingredient in a great employer brand includes an emotional component. Thereâs an element that tugs on your heartstrings just a little bit. Itâs authentic, true and ultimately creates a sense of loyalty with your audience. Remember the Chipotle commercials from a few years back? Thatâs a good example of all three of these components. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUtnas5ScSEfeature=youtu.belist=PLo5Sq8vGKhMOxUUOaMorLgYULnbwH7OeI They know what their story is as a brand, they know why theyâre different and why people choose to work for them, and they translated that into a clever video that makes you feel. Let me reiterate that â" It. Makes. You. Feel. OK, one more example. Letâs look at Thermo Fisher Scientific. Not necessarily a household name like Google or Apple, but theyâre doing incredibly important workâ¦and thatâs part of the why for their employees. Read through some of their published employee stories, and youâll notice a lack of clichés like âcareer growthâ or âworking alongside smart people.â What youâll discover instead is a well-thought-out connector between what the employee does, and why. These folks may be scientists and researchers, but they donât talk about test tubes and beakers. Theyâre improving air quality in Korea and the health of its residents. They talk about personalizing cancer and HIV treatments to save more lives. These are big initiatives and combine âwhyâ people choose to come there with the emotional aspect of it. Hereâs one last tip â" leave your audience with something impactful at the end of your story. Psychologically, people equate how they feel to the last thing they remember, much more so than to the entire story. So, speeches, videos and stories are always better when you can end on an important or emotional point. Consider these employer brand examples and compare the stories youâre telling. What are you doing well? What can you improve upon? Thanks for reading. What other employer brand stories do you admire?
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