is Your Brand Built To Attract, Retain, Or Both?
// September 18th, 2009 // Employment Branding, Internal Communications
Many companies who began the process of defining and employment value proposition and creating an employer brand did so as a means of attracting staff. The brand became important as a means of talking to the market, of building an external reputation. It was a vehicle for communicating promise to a market that had no exposure to the reality of working for you.
As the market switches from recruiting to redeployment, many experts are saying that your brand still needs to be a fundamental part of your argument. This is absolutely true – you don’t stop having a brand just because you aren’t actively promoting it. Your brand is who you are, your fundamental personality. There is a scramble within market to turn brands inward, to focus on key staff retention and keeping talent, rather than attracting it.
If your brand is built on an honest reflection of the actual employee experience, this shouldn’t be too hard. Brands which attracted by overselling the company and building an idealistic view will struggle.Companies guilty of ‘oversell’ will start to see real problems when the false retention that the current crisis has induced begins to wear off.
When the recruitment requirements of companies begin to thaw, the employment brand of a copany will be a strong determinant in attracting key staff. More importantly, it will play a huge part in your ability as a business to hold onto the key performers you need, when the downturn ends. Your brand needs to be robust enough to attract and retain with equal measure – getting them in the door is only a small aprt of finding and engaging the staff you need to succeed.


















