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Using Analytics to Develop a Better Employer Branding Strategy - Brandwagon
Using Analytics to Develop a Better Employer Branding Strategy - Brandwagon
Metrics, anyone? EB Rock star Shaunda Zilich writes up a nice piece on EB metrics. I was going to quibble with it until I realized that the best part of the article is unstated: Metrics are gibberish until you decide what your strategy is first. You can measure oodles of things and easily get batted around like a leaf on the wind unless you have clearly defined what you are trying to do and deciding the metrics on that. Once I saw that, I realized how great the article was.
·themartec.com·
Using Analytics to Develop a Better Employer Branding Strategy - Brandwagon
Coinbase: Can a company really be ‘apolitical’ in 2020?
Coinbase: Can a company really be ‘apolitical’ in 2020?
Employer brands can’t all be the same, so why are they all espousing the same ideas. They all seem to care about opportunity, and innovation and caring for their employees (in the same kinds of ways). So I love that Coinbase is taking a (very sharp) turn. They are very publicly rejecting the idea that companies have to take a stance on social good. It’s not that I don’t think companies shouldn’t care about social good, it’s that I love when a company is willing to do something different. The best part is that they didn’t dictate the position to the world, they gave staff a chance to jump ship as the boat changed course.
·fastcompany.com·
Coinbase: Can a company really be ‘apolitical’ in 2020?
To Foster Innovation, Cultivate a Culture of Intellectual Bravery
To Foster Innovation, Cultivate a Culture of Intellectual Bravery
I’ve talked before about different attributes that can help define your brand (how does your company approaches personal/professional development, what’s the level of internal transparency, amount of hierarchical structure, etc). Here’s one I hadn’t thought of before: Courage. How does your company reward courage? Can you disagree with your boss? Do you have to do it quietly one on one, or are you allowed to disagree more publicly? What about disagreeing with leadership? Answers to these simple question (assuming leadership and front-line staff agree on the answer), go a long way to defining your own company.
·hbr.org·
To Foster Innovation, Cultivate a Culture of Intellectual Bravery
How to Create an Inclusive Employer Value Proposition
How to Create an Inclusive Employer Value Proposition
Are you putting data at the heart of your EVP? Here’s a nice long article (from three people I rather respect and like) that tries to connect some dots between EVP and data. With the exception of thinking about your EVP as a catalog of your company’s traits and features instead of as an idea that aligns to and supports someone’s worldview, it suggests that we all still have a long way to go to really open our doors wider to all the different kinds of talent out there.
·fairygodboss.com·
How to Create an Inclusive Employer Value Proposition
Demystifying employer branding | LinkedIn
Demystifying employer branding | LinkedIn
I point this out not because you need to know it, but employer branders always need to have a full quiver of ways to explain what employer brand is (and isn’t), so here’s a solid article from South America on demystifying employer branding.
·linkedin.com·
Demystifying employer branding | LinkedIn
Write Down Your Team’s Unwritten Rules
Write Down Your Team’s Unwritten Rules
In fact, I think this HBR article is the other side of that coin when it says you should write down the unwritten rules of the company. Aside from pulling assumptions out from behind the curtain given them some sunlight, the exercise is a great way to reveal how you company really reacts to stimulus. I’d take it another step further and say that the unwritten rules of the company are more the culture of your company than what HR says it is, thus making it ripe fodder for employer branding architecture and narrative.
·hbr.org·
Write Down Your Team’s Unwritten Rules
‘We Are Fun!’: Why Employer Branding Needs to Move on from Culture Clichés - Brandwagon
‘We Are Fun!’: Why Employer Branding Needs to Move on from Culture Clichés - Brandwagon
I really appreciate Charlotte Marshall popping the bubble around the seemingly-universally-agreed-upon-yet-never-discussed idea that companies need to be “fun.” More than that, that there’s only one emotional trigger at work and it is called “happiness.” She touches on the idea that a strong employer brand isn’t just a claim you put on a poster, but needs to answer questions about the experience of working somewhere. Not, “do you offer free food” or “what’s the holiday party like,” but questions that start with the phrase “what happens when…?”
·themartec.com·
‘We Are Fun!’: Why Employer Branding Needs to Move on from Culture Clichés - Brandwagon
The Goal of Employer Branding Is Not to Attract the Most Candidates – ERE
The Goal of Employer Branding Is Not to Attract the Most Candidates – ERE
In honor of World Employer Branding Day, let’s recognize that as organizations continue to manage through today’s difficult times, there’s one key strategy that many smart businesses have started to re-prioritize — employer branding. Yet even with the best intentions, many companies still fail to capitalize on the opportunities of a newly refreshed employer brand…
·ere.net·
The Goal of Employer Branding Is Not to Attract the Most Candidates – ERE
Companies Settle Into New Normal With Focus on Working Parents
Companies Settle Into New Normal With Focus on Working Parents
Want to show that you “get it” when it comes to the new world of work? Stop treating working parents like an aberration and build team culture around them. This isn’t just being cool when a kid needs a snack in the middle of the zoom meeting, but assuming flexible schedules are the norm, that maybe meetings can be a little shorter with built-in break between them (instead of back-to-back-to-back) and that there’s value in not looking at a screen for.a few minutes every hour. These ideas might be designed for working parents, but I can’t imagine childless workers wouldn’t find these changes incredibly welcome, too.
·recruiter.com·
Companies Settle Into New Normal With Focus on Working Parents
10 best articles on #employerbranding in October 2020 worldwide. | LinkedIn
10 best articles on #employerbranding in October 2020 worldwide. | LinkedIn
As Autumn passes very quickly here is some good content pieces you should not skip if working strategically with your employer brand. EBnavi team never sleeps looking for the best practices, experts and content worldwide! Enjoy 10 best pieces from last month in different ares of EB! 1.
·linkedin.com·
10 best articles on #employerbranding in October 2020 worldwide. | LinkedIn