The article itself sighs at yet another list of employer branding stats that you and I might find incredibly pedestrian, but having these kinds of things handy might help move that roadblock at work. Example: 91% of candidates seek out at least one online or offline resource to evaluate an employer’s brand before applying for a job.
Recruiting Is Storytelling: To Attract Top Talent, Invest in Your PR Strategy
The phrase "recruiting through the op-ed pages" may becomes shorthand in my head for finding unique ways of getting your employer brand story out into the wild without using the "usual" channels.
I can't be the only one who feels the hesitation and mild panic that comes from occasional work-induced anxiety. I would expect it to be somewhat endemic within our industry (though I have no data to back that up). So if you need a primer on how to think (and breathe) your way through anxiety at work, HBR has something for you.
How One Person Can Change the Conscience of an Organization
I used to have a boss who used the phrase, "one man invading China" as shorthand for the person she tasked with a project that really should have gotten a LOT more resources. Of course, that could describe every employer brand person I've ever met, so I always love to see stories of how one person can make a difference in even large organizations.
Make the Offer Letter Memorable With These Tactics
For the 1,142nd time: employer branding is in every aspect of your business, even offer letters. Indeed has some great ideas on how to make those offer letters better.
Confused About Who's Engaged? Try This Handy Engagement Test to Sort It All Out... - Fistful of Talent
How can you figure out which employees are really engaged? Kris Dunn has a VERY interesting litmus test for managers. I love it because it taps into what engagement is all about: a willingness to take initiative to make tomorrow better.
There's a chance I've linked to this before, but in case I haven't, here are ten ways to encourage workplace transformation (yes, transforming your company is kind of your job). Focus, the experience, advocacy, influencers and metrics should all be very comfortable subjects in your vocabulary.
The Key to Engaging New Hires: Psychological Safety - TalentCulture
If there is "low-hanging fruit" in getting staff to engage with your employer brand, it is likely new hires. Get them before they become jaded or cynical, and show them how their engagement supports the brand and the company, and you can build an army of advocates. That said, Meghan Biro suggests the best way to engage with those new hires is to start by intentionally creating a sense of psychological safety.
Building a Successful Brand: What Does It Mean in 2020?
Branding Magazine takes a few steps back and asks, "what does brand success look like in 2020?" It's an interesting question for us employer branders, as many of us still have to explain our job and occasionally justify our existence (ugh). It's not a complex article, but might help you simplify your approach to what matters.
5 Emerging Brand Trends For 2020 | Branding Strategy Insider
This one came out too late for my summery of brand trends, but here are five emerging brand trends for 2020. I heartily endorse their first trend that as more and more "authentic reviews" turn out to be fake, candidates will stop relying on review sites as much. At the very least, candidates will change how they interpret those reviews, which should impact your own review site strategy. (And here's early examples from the Washington Post: companies that sell fake people.) Also see the fifth prediction: People will pay more for brands with a human side. As the de facto owner of the human side of your corporate brand, this is where you can make a real impact.
Build Adaptive Marketing with Psychographic Branding
Adaptive marketing and psychographic branding?! Yup. It's time to raise your game, folks. As Seth Godin talks about, people don't want a 1/2" drill bit, or even a 1/2" hole to a screw. They want to be able to hang a picture to feel like they've accomplished something. Your employer branding will work if you can better define its meaning, and tailor it to different motivations.
Supercharge Your Social Media with Sentiment Analysis
If you've been thinking about investing in tools to help you see the social media sentiment of your employer brand, this article is a nice primer. My own experience is that it is very hard to separate out consumer brand halo effects from employer brand. But this is how consumer brand pros do it.
Building A Thought-Leadership Brand | Branding Strategy Insider
There are a lot of reasons you might communicate as to why someone should work for your company. But have you considered that they'd want to work here because you're a thought leader? Here are some guidelines to consider when building out your thought leadership connected to your brand.
So many companies rely on case-based interviews, that there's an assumption that they must be useful. 50 million Elvis fans can't be wrong, right? But there's a lot of data refuting the value of this kind of evaluation. As top consulting companies shift interview styles, there's an opportunity for employer branding to both shape what is being evaluated for (thus aligning with the brand) and communicate why the shift is happening (again, reinforcing the brand and how a holistic approach to talent might be driving these changes).
Harvard Business Review: Reasons to Rethink 'Employer Brands'
Joel Cheesman of Ratedly has a nice write-up on employer brand that leans heavily on developing a framework with which to see the problem first. It does my systems-driven heart good to see more and more people realizing that just jumping into employer branding without validated frameworks is kind of like buying a used car in a language you don't understand.
What We All Long For As Job Candidates - Talent Board
Some interesting data from Talent Board on what candidates long for in their candidate experience. Spoiler: while most of us are focusing on sexy and cool programs when candidate really just want to feel like they've been heard.
Valve's 'Handbook for New Employees' leaked, hilarious illustrations included - The Verge
Consider how many people applied to Valve after seeing this viral employee handbook (which was designed as a public-facing document because it has a section on what it is looking for in new employees). If you read it, it is filled to the brim with so many little touches and brand-specfic in-jokes that it REEKS of publicity stunt, but an insanely specific one.
Worst HR Document Ever, the Employee Handbook - Fistful of Talent
Have you heard that joke that every item in an employee manual should be named for the person who necessitated that rule? The drinking at work social engagements is the Chad Rule, for example (he knows what he did)? Yeah. Employee manuals are kind of the worst. Don't take my work for it. Fistful of Talent agrees with me, calling it the "worst HR document ever." I bring this up because anything that sucks that people see is an opportunity to support your employer brand.
Creating a quick & simple dollar value business case for employer branding | LinkedIn
What's the hardest part of getting your employer brand ideas off the ground? Building a business case. Very few of us were taught this skill, so my friend Mezjan wrote up his own process for business case development perfect for EB pros.
And if you're looking to fine-tune your storytelling content strategy, Narrative Science has a nice ebook called Let Your People Be People I can recommend.
Show Bites: Keep Your Audience Hooked with Open Loops
You you content marketers and lovers of narrative-driven employer branding, have I got some gold for you... but I'll tell you more in a minute. That feeling, right there, where the writer yanks the rug out from under you and doesn't immediately satiate your curiosity? That's emotional power, something referred to as an "open loop," a glitch in your own cognition you can leverage to create more engagement and emotional connections with people.
Over at Branding Mag, there's an interesting conversation about how to create a sense of brand without a visual identity. The idea being that the experience itself is the brand. Can the experience of working somewhere be a clear brand? It's an interesting thought.
Finding Gen Z Talent in 2020: Three Predictions - TalentCulture
TalentCulture, in a three trends for hiring Gen Z talent article, suggest that we are in the midst of a shift in which tech talent doesn't always have a tech degree, which is interesting. As technology becomes democratized, it will simply be a larger element in every major's curriculum. And since you can download code and code snippets for free, it becomes easier and easier for other majors to tap into the tech. I mean, not all doctors started as biology majors.
The Rise of the Chief Well-Being Officer | Hunt Scanlon Media
In an increasingly complex and stressful world with blurred lines between personal and work lives, workers at all levels need total well-being in all aspects of their lives. Expectations at work and home are no longer distinct or neatly separate – they are becoming one and the same. Savvy companies know that workers who are well
Highlights from the LinkedIn Global Talent Trends report
LinkedIn looked at its own user data and discovered some trends for 2020 and beyond. The most interesting? They think that data and analytics have reached a kind of "inflection point" at which is it no longer a "one day" thing but more of a "we're falling behind" thing. Also, they are seeing trends that their next new hire is likely to be found internally than in recent years.