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Employer brands

Executive Springboard employer branding

Why Brands Still Matter Beyond Marketing

I am a reformed marketing guy, but I remain passionate about brands. Many people like me who grew up in “high image” categories like tobacco, liquor or perfume shied away from considering the functional benefit of what we sold. After all, who wants to remind people of their addictions? Instead, we focused on the emotional reasons why people would choose our kind of tequila over the Bad Guys’ product.
After all, if you have not created a brand that differentiates your offering from competition, if you are stuck in a commoditized world, creating demand might come down to lowering your price.

The Shift From Traditional Brand Thinking

From Emotional Branding to Data-Driven Marketing

As the science of marketing won favor, as digital A/B testing came to the fore, the analog world of brands receded. Over the years, I have had dozens of conversations with brand strategists, bemoaning how difficult business has become. Chief Marketing Officers have less time for them.

Where Brand Conversations Happen Today

I hold out hope for these strategists, and for the future of brands, but only if they look in unlikely places. Brands are no longer the exclusive domain of marketing. Instead, I believe CEOs and CHROs are where the brand conversations are taking place.

Expanding the Definition of a Brand

Beyond Customers to All Stakeholders

Historically, when you considered your brand, it was the reputation or relationship that your business had with customers or consumers. Under the umbrella of your brand were all the touch points you had with customers. Communications, packaging, website, sales calls, user interface, even billing are stimuli that define the relationship you have with your customer.


These remain part of the mix, but the circle of stakeholders has expanded beyond customers. Now we think of shareholders, communities served and employees.

The Core Elements of Brand Strategy

What Sits at the Heart of Any Brand

At the heart of a brand strategy are:

  • (1) an insight into what drives stakeholders to act in a desired way
  • (2) a brand promise that offers how the brand makes people feel and
  • (3) an essence that distills the brand into the few qualities that make the promise believable.

An Example of Brand Strategy in Action

So, if you are an NBA franchise, you might realize that many of your season ticket holders are businesses that entertain clients and prospects, and that the in-arena experience is a reflection on the ticket holder’s business. That you promise a ticket holder to be part of what is happening in their community. And that you offer an event that is more intimate than other pro sports, that is part of a night on the town and that creates an affiliation between you and other fans.


You build your marketing plan around ways to deliver the feeling of being part of what’s happening in your community.

Turning Brand Thinking Toward Employees

The Case for Employer Branding

With this as background, what if we turn our thinking about brands towards current or future employees? How do we retain them? How do we attract new people who bring desired competencies? How do we engage and align our current workforce? How do we want them to feel about the company, their colleagues and themselves for working there? How to we make their retention more than a function of compensation?


If your goal is to create a team of A-players who function well together, it’s time to consider your brand as an employer.

Aligning Brand Essence With Employee Identity

Choosing You as an Employer

Have you determined how your brand essence matches with how your workers think about themselves? Or whether what you promise leads workers to choose your company as their employer rather than other companies in your industry or in your area?


It‘s magic when a brand strategy works as well with your employees as it does with your customers. When this happens, you are able to use the same language, and the customer experience becomes the employee experience.


But if your customers don’t look like your employees, your employer brand might be quite different from your market-facing brand. There is no reason to have a suboptimal employer brand just for the sake of economy.

Building an Employer Brand

How to Create It

Creating an employer brand can be done in the same way as your brand for your customers. Get an experienced brand strategist to lead the process from outside the organization. Seek input across the organization. Create an internal team to develop and activate the brand. Take advantage of key opinion leaders who can become internal brand ambassadors.

Activating the Employer Brand

Where Strategy Meets Culture

Once developed, the activation of an employer brand is critical. It is where strategy and culture often meet. And it is where a CEO or a Chief People Officer takes the lead.

Four Elements of an Effective Employer Brand Strategy

A Mission That Gets People Out of Bed in the Morning

This is what differentiates a job from a calling. A job provides a straightforward value equation of work for compensation. If your employee buys into a purpose you provide that transcends what they can do on their own, your relationship is cemented by something deeper than a paycheck.

Reinforcement Mechanisms That Make Workers Feel Valued

If a worker feels like their contribution is insignificant, even if directed towards a glorious mission, they might not become engaged. If they understand why their work is important and receive feedback that indicates mastery, they will find pride in playing their part.

Stories That Explain Your Values

There is immense power in storytelling to internalize culture. Stories connect an organization’s

Means of Collaboration That Strengthen Belonging

Work can provide transcendence beyond meaning alone. Being part of something bigger requires shared goals, collaboration, learning from others, and celebrating success together.

Why Employer Brand Matters More Than Ever

For some in the marketing world, giving brands high priority may seem like a relic from a bygone era. For those concerned about the relationship between their business and the people who make it go, there are few things more important.

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

An employer brand is how current and potential employees perceive what it feels like to work at your organization. It reflects your mission, values, culture, and the emotional experience of being part of the company.
Employer branding directly affects retention, engagement, and the ability to attract top talent. Because it intersects with culture and leadership behavior, it naturally belongs with CEOs and Chief People Officers rather than marketing alone.
Customer branding focuses on how your organization is perceived by the market, while employer branding focuses on how employees experience the organization. In the best cases, the two align but they don’t have to be identical.
An effective employer brand is activated through a clear mission, recognition systems, meaningful stories, and strong collaboration. Together, these elements help employees feel valued, connected, and committed beyond compensation alone.

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