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Take the Aberdeen Group in the US. They've confirmed that 45% of companies over there said that significantly enhancing this experience proved to be the major talent acquisition priority for 2016.
Sure, companies can mount sustained recruitment marketing and employer brand-building campaigns, investing huge amounts to promote their company and career opportunities to tempt top talent to their table. But what's really behind the success of such initiatives is not the overall razzmatazz but the manner in which companies engage with and manage prospective talent.
Brand perceptions are always at the forefront of a candidate's thinking on entering your world, so the manner in which you deal with his or her expectations from the very start will either enhance or fragment your reputation as an employer right up to its journey's end.
Here is your basic formula for creating an exceptional experience for your exceptional candidate:
Emphasise the enormous impact that a positive or negative candidate interaction, experience or engagement can have on your holistic brand. Don’t overlook the fact that social media channels provide freedom of speech where candidates can comment on and share their likes, disappointments and overall experience openly. It's a powerful vehicle that can harm or promote your employer brand.
Global insights are stressing over and over again that prospective candidates highly rate the opinions, reviews and criticisms in the open job market via social media, job review websites and through traditional word of mouth. (Friends and family will accept or reject a job offer based on this.) Glassdoor reports that 96% of job seekers say they are influenced by employee–provided reviews and ratings with 90% of them likely to read reviews about a company before accepting a job offer.
Companies striving towards improving their customer service in order to increase sales need to start focusing on how they intend revolutionising the experience that candidates have when embarking on a journey through their organisation from start to hiring or shelving.
This should be viewed no differently than the corporate experience, because candidates are also ‘buyers’ and can encounter good and bad experiences along the way. Whether an individual is engaging with your organisation as a consumer or candidate, their experience should be consistent as you strive towards building your holistic brand reputation.