Employer Branding for Recruiting the Talent

Organisations once competed by controlling finite resources. Everything was vertically integrated in the industrial era, and business success was dependent on boxing out the competition. In stark contrast, the resource that companies compete on today is innovation. So instead of extracting finite resources, they organise themselves around their talent.

Staying ahead in business is now all about finding new ways to attract and inspire an energetic workforce.

Given the amount of opportunity in the technology space, why on earth would a talented worker choose your company? The short answer is; employer branding. Talk of jobs and security’ has been replaced with ‘talent and opportunity’. And as the war for talent increases, companies must define and continually refine their employee branding strategy

What makes a company a great place to work?

It’s people that make the business. So a company’s reputation as an employer, or employer branding, is a top priority for human resources and management. A great place to work upholds key principles including: employee autonomy, business transparency, and bold leadership. But most of all a great pace to work provides a nourishing company culture.

Funnily enough, human resources has always been a marketing function, it just hasn’t always acted like it. The role of the HR professional is not to promote a job but to sell the company DNA (the product) to the most fitting candidate (the consumer).

“Good talent managers think like business people and innovators first, and like HR people last.”

Today it’s not uncommon to hear of ‘People and Culture’ teams parading as the new HR. These folks work tirelessly on culture including on-boarding, training and professional development, events, rewards and benefits, mentorship, 360 feedback, off-boarding the big and little things that in sum make for an attractive place to work. It’s no small feat to get employer branding right.

Why many HR professionals are scratching their heads when it comes to staffing up their organisations: Companies want misfits, yet they want to hire them the old-fashioned way,

“Companies want revolutionaries, yet they want their most conservative leaders to identify them.”

The most progressive companies should be asking themselves questions like:

·       What conversations are taking place between our workers? What are former employees saying?

·       What specific functions (not jobs) do we need done and how can we resource them in the smartest and most agile way?

·       Is the traditional total hours week the optimum way to empower our workers, and more importantly, engage them in being productive and doing their best work?

·       Do dynamic and fluid talent networks provide a viable solution to meet some or all of our needs?

By becoming more flexible and open minded, companies can come closer to accommodating what top talent want; a sense of being needed, an ability to really contribute, opportunities for continuous learning, and yes, competitive compensation too. If an organization’s greatest asset is its talent, then the most important tool is its ability to empower people.

  • Championing the cause

The ushers of the company cause are no longer CHROs so much as everyone in (and often outside) of the business. Wielding the new field of “Employee Experience Design”, progressive companies succeed by thinking about and designing for the entire employee journey. Recruiting is much more holistic today than in the past, and the methods that work are all about taking a human centred approach.

Promoting a true value exchange over the severely outdated psychological contracts is what’s required in today’s competitive landscape. A company must tell a true and compelling story if it hopes to excite candidates and attract the talent they seek. They must also constantly work on improving their culture in order to keep their current talent. Leading the way are companies that are ditching resumes in favour of love letters or even observing behaviour outside of the office. And of course there is one company that always looks at discerning a given candidate’s Googleyness.

  • Getting it right

One of the best recruiting mechanisms among tech companies in the past years was not some ubiquitous advertisement or over-the-top perk. Nor was it an obscene starting salary. It was the ‘Freedom & Responsibility’

According to my personal research by psychologists, experiencing choice is itself energising and essential for well-being. It can also help employees succeed in goals outside of the office which are increasingly relevant as the lines between life and work converge. It’s incredible how a businesses can flourish when they simply treat people like adults.

  • It’s a matter of interest

The average tenure for workers at G*** company from my research is onlu one year. It’s only getting more challenging to retain staff. It’s dependent on aligning people (assuming they are skilled in a given field) with their interests. Accordingly, he asks all his potential hires what their interests are to try and understand what moves and motivates them. And then he wraps their work around this.

  • Cultivating culture

The single most important focus you can have is fostering a top-tier culture and experience for existing employees. In so doing, they will do the marketing for you.

Happy workers we’ll boast to others about their workplace and this is by far the most attractive tool for recruiting future candidates.

It’s crucial to focus on the who first and then the what. “Get the right people on the bus, the wrong people off the bus, and the right people in the right seats, and then figure out where to drive.” This style of leadership is the one that will win in today’s economy. And good leadership not only helps define your brand but has a cascading effect on developing a dynamic company culture.

Taking a more expansive view of talent and the opportunities you provide to help workers thrive is what’s required. It’s crucial that you provide employees with:

Choice — emphasise flexible working arrangements that allow your employees to have control over how they work. This will demonstrate that your aim is to empower and not diminish.

Respect — it’s shocking how many workplaces don’t have integrity. Employees that aren’t respected will not show goodwill and eventually will leave.

Challenges — if you want to attract the best of the best, appreciate they are going to want a meaty challenge that goes beyond the pay check. Be sure to express that your culture is a place where experimentation is encouraged and failure is rewarded. It’s really the only way you will innovate with your people and enable your workers to flourish.


Regards,

Arif Aulia Rahman

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Arif Aulia Rahman, CPHR., CHRE的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了