Your candidate experience should be consistent no matter where candidates engage with your employer brand, whether that’s on your careers site, on a job posting, at a career fair—anywhere!
Your recruitment marketing and employer branding strategies likely utilize many channels (and they should!), so you want to ensure that experience is seamless across all of them.
We completely agree, Keca! So, here are 4 “do’s” of multi-channel employer branding to ensure that you’re providing a seamless candidate experience everywhere.
Ensure candidates have the same experience with your employer brand no matter where they see you—on or offline. Hopefully, that experience is a positive one! Tell a story across all channels that will create engagement and be impactful to drive candidates through your recruitment marketing funnel.
Know the channels where your employer brand exists and audit how they align. This will help you understand how a candidate may be finding you, learning more about you, and making the decision to apply for your jobs.
Understand the different channels in your recruitment marketing strategy and how each provides a unique opportunity to create candidate engagement.
Pro Tip: Use Video! “Improve the candidate experience on your careers site, social media, and other channels by incorporating more video in your recruitment marketing strategy. Video really helps showcase your employer brand by bringing your company culture to life in a quick, easily-digestible channel.”
- Michelle Sargent, VP of Business Development at Recruitics
Put on your job seeker hat, search your company online, try applying for an open position or two, and see what the candidate experience is like for yourself! Audit as you go and take note of where you can improve the experience, where your employer brand needs more consistency, and where information or details are missing that a candidate might find valuable.
- Jillian O'Malior, Director of Employer Brand at Recruitics
Don’t be inauthentic! You shouldn’t speak about your company and candidate/employee experience unless it’s from a true and human place. Make sure to gather feedback from your employees (e.g. Employee Resource Groups, or ERGs, are a great way to do this) to discover what is “real” in your employer brand and what your value is as an employer. You shouldn’t try to define this on your own; utilize your employees’ perspectives and experiences.
Pro Tip: Don’t Assume! “Your EVP, and your employer brand, is never what you say it is; it’s what your employees and candidates say it is. Try not to go into EVP and brand development with preconceived notions of who you are as a company. Instead, come in open to hearing and seeing what others define you as.”
- Jillian O'Malior, Director of Employer Brand at Recruitics
Join our webinar with Phenom People on Thursday, February 6th at 2 pm ET / 11 am PT. Michelle, Jillian, and Keca will dive into more detail on creating a seamless candidate experience, from job boards to your career site.
Do you need help identifying your employer brand? Or maybe you need assistance activating your employer brand across multiple channels? Recruitics can help! Contact us today to learn more.
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Featured Resources:
Phenom People’s “The State of Candidate Experience: 2020 Benchmarks Report”
3 Ways to Improve the Candidate Experience [with Templates!], from Phenom People
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