Who is your customer? đ𧎠EBH
New look, new feel, still trying to get you to think strategically about your recruiting.
How did Quartzâs newsroom get serious about bringing in better hires?
It turns out there's a whole wide world of talented people who don't live in New York. Opening our jobs to them immediately increased the quality of our application pools; we had more and better candidates.
Now replace âwho donât live in New Yorkâ with âwho arenât white dudesâ or âwho arenât disabledâ or âwho donât fit the partâ and youâll see the reason why diversity matters to businesses: They get better candidates, who become better hires.
Wendy Dodd literally JUST sent this to me (Hi, Wendy!). Itâs a story in a series about people who work at the US Forest Service. Read it. Here are my notes:
Strong stories of success start with conflict or hardship. Donât gloss over that.
You donât have to pay the most to get the best.
Visuals matter. It isnât about being gorgeous. Itâs about being interesting.
This must have been a tough (hours) story to write. What would a self-told story looked like? Or sounded like? Especially as youâll want to tell more of them.
Whether I want to work for the Forest Service (I donât - for me, the outdoors is the place where I wait for my bus), I know what these jobs are like. And thatâs a far sight better than your job postings and BS career sites.
𧎠The enduring power of a 2x2 matrix in business (and life). 
𧎠You have a LOT going on. Maybe carve out an 'âuntouchableâ day. Âť
𧎠In pharma, thereâs a way the smaller company can out-hire the bigger, richer one. Âť
𧎠How the pros think through a brand launch. 
𧎠Want people to take your branding more seriously? Consider building a visual style guide. 
𧎠A six-step employee engagement plan template. 
𧎠Been looking for a marketing book recommendation? Here are five great ones. 
𧎠AI to help you turn engagement surveys into useful info? 
𧎠AI to turn reviews and research into sentiment analysis? 
𧎠Employer Brand Breakdown: 600-employee Flex Technology Group. 
If youâre interested in getting an employer brand faster, reply with the word, âfast.â
The Law of Customers
Corporate branding has a lot of impacts, everything from helping to increase interest in investment to increasing interest in their products. But who is corporate brandingâs first customer? The company itself. That means focusing less on individual teams or products and focusing on making the company look attractive.
Consumer branding has a lot of impacts, everything from increasing the stock price to generating interest in working there. But consumer brandingâs first customer is the consumer. Their focus is first, second and always on generating new customers and keeping the customers they have,
So before I reveal the obvious third part of that idea, I feel the need to wade into the question of âwhere should employer branding live?â
Last time I checked, 55-60% of EB functions live in TA with 30-35% live in Marketing, and the rest in Comms.
There are some really good arguments for each. You can make a solid case that it requires a âmarketing brainâ to do good employer branding, that marketing tools are more useful to the EB owner. I get that. But I also buy the idea living in TA means a closer relationship with recruiters and candidates, that ideas are more likely accepted if they come in the form that TA is used to. And thereâs a strong argument that employer branding is a kind of communication to and about employees, so it should live in comms (I will mentally put some asterisks next to comms based on personal experience, but I know my experience wasnât the norm).
Those arguments focus on function. For my money, because employer brand is such a big job with a million ways to do it well (see: Law of Options), what matters is the person in the role. If itâs someone with marketing skills, they will do the most good in TA. Itâs the fastest way to level up on recruiting thinking to ensure good work gets adopted. If they are a recruiter, they need to live in marketing to get a crash course in how marketing thinks and moves.
But in the end, what matters most is who the customer is.
In employer branding, while there are so many knock-on effects for the work being done, the first customer is always the candidate or future employee.Â
Sure, strong employer branding can increase morale. It can increase advocacy. It can create stronger connections between recruiters and their hiring managers. (See my free ebook on the proof that EB works, straight from the EB managersâ mouths.)
But all that takes a back seat to one simple idea: Are you helping people understand who you are, what you offer, and how youâre different so that they can make an informed decision about applying and accepting a role there?Â
All the good youâre going to do for the company starts with that simple idea.
For companies who think they canât afford employer branding strategy (too small, unsexy industry, no consumer presence), letâs talk. In fifteen minutes, I can help you see if employer branding can help you hire faster and better. If it can save you money and get the attention of leadership. And the best part is that thereâs no risk: I primarily get paid on results.
Also:
Early bird pricing for EB workshop ends August 29th. This is the only class Iâm holding until next year.
Breakdown videos and so much more on my YouTube channel
***This Newsletter Contains No ChatGPT***
-James Ellis [LinkedIn] [Website]
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