Wednesday, July 22, 2020
Should your organisation be appointing internal influencers - Hays Journal Viewpoint careers advice blog
Should your organisation be appointing internal influencers - Hays Journal While most businesses agree that staff can be the strongest brand ambassadors, using them as such can be a challenge. In the latest Hays Journal, we explore why some organisations are now appointing âinternal influencersâ to engage with staff, promote new ways of working and help to attract new talent Today, many people associate the word âinfluencerâ with social media â" people with hundreds of thousands of followers who can make or break a brand just by posting one photo. Increasingly, however, organisations are realising that they can harness the influence of their own employees. Given that traditional marketing can be perceived as âbeing sold toâ, a message coming from a happy, engaged employee can seem more authentic. In fact, non-branded messages are shared 24 times more frequently than those shared by official company channels, according to communications company MSL Group. One of the areas where harnessing the power of internal influencers can be most powerful when facing external audiences is recruitment. âItâs a missed trick if companies donât realise that their most powerful branding tool is their employees,â says Craig Hunter, Sourcing Director for EMEA at American Express. The importance of employee advocacy According to workforce communications company SocialChorus, employees have on average 10 times more social connections than a brand does. Theyâre often prolific social sharers; PR company Weber Shandwick estimates that 98 per cent of employees use at least one social networking site, and 50 per cent of those people post about where they work. By encouraging them to share positive stories about your brand, these influencers can amplify your investment in employer branding and recruitment advertising. Jo Crellin, from PR and social media company spottydog communications, runs employee social media channels for clients including Mitchells Butlers, one of the UKâs biggest pub chains. She uses a âcascade planâ that she shares with the companyâs recruitment team so there is a schedule for what employees share across their personal and professional networks (Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn and Twitter). âThis means the story is drip-fed over a sustained time period without any clashes,â she explains. Enlisting the social media power of employees has led to increased awareness of vacancies at the company and a growth in applications. How employee influencers can boost your brand Claudia Varela Herrera, a marketing and diversity expert based in Colombia, has seen this manifest itself in a number of ways. She says: âSmall companies, often with millennials as CEOs, like to show employees as influencers with different profiles that match perfectly with the company. Another trend is to position the companyâs values using leading women as role models. In that way, they enhance their leaderâs personal brand while taking advantage of their image endorsement and boost to their reputation.â While your internal influencers showcase the positive employee experiences, businesses can also recruit employees to become impactful brand ambassadors; the key difference is that the latterâs message is much more externally focused and customer-facing. Good brand ambassadors can be a source of honest reviews of your products â" buyers trust reviews from family and friends over âtraditionalâ advertising because they feel they are more authentic. US department store Macyâs, for example, recently launched an initiative called Macyâs Style Crew with 20 employee ambassadors who would post pictures of themselves on social media wearing the storeâs merchandise. This has grown to more than 400 employees actively sharing their photos across channels such as Snapchat and Instagram. The workers have built up a loyal following and Macyâs has reduced the amount it spends on external marketing. Internal influencers as drivers of change Influencers can be strong advocates for an organisation internally too. They can fire up engagement among teams and help to push through change where employees may fear it. The University of Glasgow in Scotland has recently embarked on a transformation programme aimed at helping the institution respond to the uncertain future that higher education in the UK is entering. This includes redesigning how the university offers assessment and feedback, and updating support services that enable academics to undertake teaching and research. As part of the âWorld-Changing Glasgow Transformation Programmeâ, it appointed Chris Green as its first Chief Transformation Officer in April 2018. He is in the process of building a network of staff and students who he hopes will embed this change. âWeâre building a network of people who will challenge the status quo and who are curious about how people and institutions do things,â he explains. Everyone from the staff and student body is encouraged to join so that there is a range of different people and experiences. The network is currently comprised of around 140 people, but the intention is to grow this to 300 or 400. âThere are 8,500 employees at Glasgow and we canât talk to all of them. We need our community to design, embed and deliver the change as well as let us know if weâre doing anything wrong,â Green adds. The network leaders send out a monthly bulletin containing an overview of change projects and there are regular face-to-face engagement sessions on particular initiatives, as well as how to manage projects and deal with change. In order to build influencersâ networking skills, the university set up randomised coffee meets with others in the change network so they could share insights. Driving influence from the bottom up One of the characteristics of Glasgowâs change programme is that the vision comes from the very top of the organisation, but the influence spreads from the bottom up. Vicky Williams, People Director, HR and Development at the UKâs LTA, Tennis For Britain, talks about internal influence as a process of âosmosisâ. When she joined the organisation in 2013, she drove the development of a set of four values (and associated behaviours) expected of the organisationâs employees and the 25,000-plus volunteers who are involved in grassroots tennis around the country. Because employees and volunteers had a role in coming up with the values and in driving internal change, they have been easier to embed into the culture. âIf values are initiated by a set of consultants, theyâre not truly owned by the people. It can be top-down led, but it needs to be initiated from the bottom up,â she says. âWe try to catch people doing good things.â One of the simple ways the organisation does this is by sharing recognition postcards with employees who have done something that embodies the LTAâs values. Their colleagues see these behaviours in action and the influence spreads. Since the values were launched, both volunteer and employee satisfaction (as measured in employee engagement surveys) has increased, says Williams. How leaders can act as role models To identify internal influencers, it pays to look beyond the senior leadership team, argues Jenny Perkins from leadership consultancy Cirrus, who has worked with clients such as Tesco Bank and Marks Spencer on building engagement. âItâs crucial for senior leaders to be role models for your brand values, but organisations should also identify and encourage others to become brand ambassadors,â she says. âWhen Iâm working with a client on an engagement programme, we always work together to create a network of influencers â" if you communicate your goals effectively and invite people to get involved, itâs likely that you wonât be short of volunteers.â And donât overlook those who may be sceptical of what youâre trying to achieve, she adds. âPeople who may be cynical and disengaged to begin with and who subsequently become enthusiasts also make wonderful ambassadors â" they are particularly good at engaging other cynics.â Becoming an authentic brand Crucially, organisations must give influencers the freedom to speak freely with colleagues, as the more authentic they are, the more likely others are to trust their opinion. Perkins says: âEnsure that your influencers understand your business goals, but donât expect them to communicate using âcorporate-speakâ. If they can engage people using methods that are close to their own hearts, they are more likely to enthuse and spread excitement.â This can take on an unexpected form â" at one company Perkins worked with, influencers from different parts of the organisation who had never met before formed a choir through their own initiative. âThe choir initiated a âdisruptionâ activity by singing about a key message outside the canteen,â she says. âThey also performed for the board and became widely respected across the organisation.â A good network of internal influencers can also help to spread the brand message outside of the business. This can be as simple as leaving reviews on careers site Glassdoor or sharing new roles across their personal social networks. Simone Weber-Korol, Head of Global Human Resources at chemical company BASF, says: âEmployees are our strongest brand ambassadors, and from a recruiting perspective they are also our strongest and most influencing âchannelâ. Their talent recommendations mostly fit best, not only from a technical and educational perspective, but also culturally.â Carl Hoffmann, CEO of Talentry (a software platform for employee referrals), agrees and notes that organisations can leverage this, even without formal programmes, by identifying which employees tend to be vocal about the company or have referred someone to the company. âThose contacts are most likely happy employees who act as brand ambassadors in their time at work, but also in private, when meeting people or on social media,â he says. And if there are concerns that one group of influential individuals will simply attract the attention of similar people, ensure that your network of influencers is itself made up of people with different roles and interests, advises Susy Roberts, executive coach and founder at Hunter Roberts. âA diverse group of influencers will target an equally diverse group. The content they share can demonstrate which values are lived in their company,â she says. âSatisfied employees lead to a healthy corporate culture and vice versa,â adds Hoffmann. âUltimately, this equilibrium is what wins awards and good reviews on platforms like Glassdoor. Such awards will be communicated by your employees who act as influencers. And that will attract new talent.â Whether the goal is to promote your employer brand, boost engagement or embed a major change, a team of champions could be the best tool at your disposal. Did you enjoy this blog? Here are some more Hays Journal 17 blogs that you may be interested in: How loneliness could be killing productivity in your business How voice search technology is changing the workplace Why a returnship programme could boost diversity in your business How you can get more from your middle managers Is a co-working space right for your organisation? How Boeing is building the future How mountaineering helps this CEO in his business Why becoming a mother has made McAfeeâs CHRO more aware of prejudices Three reasons you need to build a digitally inclusive workplace
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