Candidates are looking to find out what it’s really like to work at your company. And, they’re not going to take your word (or words on your website) for it. They need hard evidence of your employee experience and culture. This has always been the case, but in 2022? Multiply it by a thousand.
The past two years have seen unprecedented challenges, and a heavy burden of proof on your employer brand to show how it supports its people. Candidates are keenly interested in how you’ve cared for your team members in the pandemic and in the demands for increased inclusion, diversity and belonging.
They’re interested in how your culture has held up or changed.
They’re interested in what it looks like to work at your company right now.
And, they’re only going to believe it when they hear it from your employees.
Your team members are the people who experience and form the culture that results from organizational actions, attitudes, and values. Talent audiences will only believe that your company provides empathy during the darkest days of COVID-19, or that it truly really values diversity and inclusion, when they have proof.
Finding that proof is not hard. At Stories Inc., we’ve found that employees overwhelmingly want to share their stories of how work has changed this year, and what their workplaces have done specifically to support them. In fact, they’re sharing heartfelt appreciation for how they’re being taken care of and how culture has positively adjusted in the pandemic.
Significantly, team members from some companies are eager to share how their company is creating an inclusive environment. Even organizations just beginning the work towards greater equity and belonging are sharing stories that illustrate their commitment. These are the stories your candidates want to hear.
Content that’s critical to connecting with your candidates in late 2021 and early 2022:
Right now, it’s essential that you lean in to these topics in your recruitment marketing content.
However, many companies are not addressing these concerns at all on their candidate-facing channels. Some organizations may fear that sharing team member stories about these issues isn’t “safe,”
But, what is not helpful to candidates is culture content that only shows them what it used to look like to work there. Playing it “safe” and keeping content generic, with no substantive stories of ways your culture has changed is the least safe route your 2022 content can take.
In our work uncovering team member stories that reveal culture, we have found that employee storytellers are bringing up how their life has changed before we can even ask. They have a lot to say about their work and workplace right now. Candidates care about how a workplace treated their employees during our nation’s most turbulent and uncertain times. Thus, the experiences captured now will be valuable post-COVID, providing important answers to candidate questions.
Importantly, we’re currently hearing that after sharing their experiences with us, employees feel recognized and valued by their employer. When organizations prioritize listening to employee experiences by creating the time and space for employees to share stories, companies reinforce that employees matter.
Of course, with so many people working from their homes or in workplaces that have adapted for safety, capturing stories has adapted, too. And, those differences are key elements of employees’ stories. Candidates can visualize the changes you’ve made to care for employees, from remote work options to new health measures and policies.
At Stories Inc., we feel so strongly that the stories employees have to tell now are exactly what candidates need to experience visually, that at the beginning of the pandemic we developed a new way of capturing stories. And today, our Virtual Story Sessions have facilitated hundreds of virtual interviews and scores of compelling videos, remotely.
Now, we can either interview storytellers on-site in the workplaces or ship storytellers a box of video and audio gear and capture stories remotely. We always leave ample time for our virtual interviews, because the storytellers are brimming over with examples that communicate so well the culture they’re experiencing now.
If you already have an inclusive corporate culture that encourages diversity, it’s possible to show that to talent audiences. The key is to uncover personal examples of inclusion and equality from all over your organization. When employee storytellers share how they are celebrated for being themselves, those stories provide the essential supporting evidence to the wording on the Diversity and Inclusion section of your careers site, and elsewhere. And when you amplify underrepresented voices, you also give team members who want to come forward chances to be seen, heard and recognized.
In the recruitment marketing videos we produce virtually for our partners, we weave in photos and footage to honor the stories and bring them to life. These supporting sources provide opportunities to communicate a larger look at the overall members of your organization and more perspectives. While stories of “now” are vital, stories that communicate the diversity, inclusion, belonging and equity that your team members experience remain valuable content to candidates. And, when you present a variety of stories, you show diversity in action.
What if you are just now starting your journey towards inclusion and belonging? What if you don’t have the proof of these efforts just yet?
You’re not alone. Most organizations have not arrived at an ideal cultural state of inclusion and belonging. In fact, even the most progressive companies view it as a continual journey. No one is perfect, and the work is never complete.
No matter where you are in this work, don’t stay silent about your company’s commitment and the things you’re doing to improve. Candidates, and current employees, really care about your efforts. Recent surveys have revealed that 55 percent of employees believe their companies should be doing more to increase diversity and inclusion, and 86 percent of job seekers say that a workplace that has representation from many backgrounds is important to them. So, you need to say something about the work you’re doing, no matter where you are.
Your company’s specific actions in pursuit of greater equity and diversity are the stories you should share. The people who are leading the change and benefitting from your efforts are your storytellers. If your company has made public statements about increasing diversity or hiring pledges, share stories about what you’re doing specifically to drive towards those goals.
Showing what you’re doing to learn and the actions you’re taking are the ways you can prove to candidates your sincerity.
Don’t force D&I content about aspects of culture that aren’t there. Producing content that’s not based upon what really exists in your culture or misrepresents how far along the company is with inclusion is a huge mistake, and will result in candidates feeling fooled once they arrive as employees. Instead, candidly share about your goals for improving. What’s real is what resonates.
The stories happening at workplaces right now are exactly what your candidates want to hear. The support an employee received from a manager while working from home with two young children. Why a leadership team member felt it was important to take a public stance against racism. The lessons a team learned when they had to change the way they worked due to the pandemic. Draw out those stories from your employees, capture them, and share them. Those stories are your employer brand.