Hi everybody, Can anyone help me out of this??????????? How is HR related to marketing and how can we apply HR in marketing?????????? Regards Pooja
From India, Indore
From India, Indore
Hi Pooja,
HR related to marketing?--
HR policies like-
Attractive C&B,
training progs
Vibrant culture
Best Talent/workforce,
Advertisements- build Brand equity
All help in to Market HR to potential candidates...to apply & have a ready database of bench candidates...
Make sure HR initiatives are highlighted in marketing campaigns..
take the example of Infyosis advt....the employees themselves talk about the company ,its value & how it has added meaning in their life..job satisfaction etc...
Cheerio
Rajat
From India, Pune
HR related to marketing?--
HR policies like-
Attractive C&B,
training progs
Vibrant culture
Best Talent/workforce,
Advertisements- build Brand equity
All help in to Market HR to potential candidates...to apply & have a ready database of bench candidates...
Make sure HR initiatives are highlighted in marketing campaigns..
take the example of Infyosis advt....the employees themselves talk about the company ,its value & how it has added meaning in their life..job satisfaction etc...
Cheerio
Rajat
From India, Pune
HR AND MARKETING ALIGNMENT
HO PREPARES CORPORATE
mission/objectives/strategies/plans/budget/schedules.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this, all other business units/departments prepare
their respective objectives/strategies/plans/budget/schedules.
Marketing prepare their department's
objectives/strategies/plans/budget/schedules
===============================================
IN case of HR, which is a department by itself,
This final corporate mission statement, objectives and strategies
becomes the foundation information for the HR department
to work out your departmental objectives/strategies/plans.
But bulk of HR activities / plans are linked/ based on the
HR NEEDS of other departments, like MARKETING.
===========================================
STEP A
Discuss with MARKETING, which could include
*product management/sales/advertising/sales promotion/market research
their requirements
-for manpower
-recruitments
-replacements
-training
etc etc
Once you get their departmental requirements, HRM develops
for MARKETING,
-recruitment /selection plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-training plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-rewards plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-development plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-payroll plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
- performance management plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-staff/organization communication plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
etc etc
-HR POLICIES
-HR PROCEDURES
-HR PRACTICES.
-HR PLANS
ETC.
===============================================
Example of HR ALIGNING with MARKETING OBJECTIVE/STRATEGY.
Marketing Strategy: Expand into the global market.
Marketing Objective: Phase 1 enter the european market.
Obtain 2% of the market in the first 18 months.
----------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------
Marketing Objective : Gain 2 % market share in the first 18 months.
Marketing Strategy : Develop new products .
Develop product promotions, with mutilingual
media plan.
Marketing Needs: *Key employees will need to be able to communicate
in a second language of europe.
*Product managers need orientation in european
culture.
WHAT HR CAN DO FOR PRODUCT MANAGEMENT?
HR contribution: *Language training for product managers
*European culture orientation for product managers
*European economy orientation for product managers
*Rewrite the product manager's job description/ job competences/
job specification.
===============================================
Sales Objective : Gain Sales of $X in the first 18 months.
Sales Strategy : *Sell current products in euro market
*Sell new products in euro market.
*Determine new market segments.
*Develop a range of KEY accounts.
Sales Needs: *Key employees will need to be able to communicate
in a second language of europe.
*Sales managers/team need orientation in european
culture.
*Sales managers/team need orientation in european
economy.
*Sales team need sales skills/ approach.
*Sales team need an understanding of
euro customer buying pattern.
*New sales team recruitment.
WHAT HR CAN DO FOR SALES MANAGEMENT?
HR contribution: *Language training for sales team.
*European culture orientation for the sales team.
*European economy orientation for the sales team.
*Euro market orientation for the sales team.
*Euro selling skills for the sales team.
*Euro customer servicing orientation for the sales team.
*Rewrite the sales manager's job description/ job competences/
job specification.
*Rewrite the sales team's job description/ job competences/
job specification.
*develop a new performance standards for sales team.
*develop a new rewards incentive system.
----------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------
In this way, you can design/ develop all HR activities/ programs
and align them with MARKETING DEPARTMENTS' various
sections like
-sales promotions section
-advertising section
-merchandising section
-channel management section
-marketing research section
-etc.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now as a HR manager, you know
-what the marketing / sales objectives / strategies are
-what the marketing /sales needs are
-what the HR contribution should be
and also what/ how your HR plans impact the
marketing departments results.
----------------------------------------------------------------- ---------
TO ACHIEVE THIS, YOU AS A HR MANAGER
MUST WORK VERY CLOSELY WITH THE
MARKETING DEPARTMENT MANAGERS.
HOPE THIS IS USEFUL TO YOU
REGARDS
LEO LINGHAM
From India, Mumbai
HO PREPARES CORPORATE
mission/objectives/strategies/plans/budget/schedules.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this, all other business units/departments prepare
their respective objectives/strategies/plans/budget/schedules.
Marketing prepare their department's
objectives/strategies/plans/budget/schedules
===============================================
IN case of HR, which is a department by itself,
This final corporate mission statement, objectives and strategies
becomes the foundation information for the HR department
to work out your departmental objectives/strategies/plans.
But bulk of HR activities / plans are linked/ based on the
HR NEEDS of other departments, like MARKETING.
===========================================
STEP A
Discuss with MARKETING, which could include
*product management/sales/advertising/sales promotion/market research
their requirements
-for manpower
-recruitments
-replacements
-training
etc etc
Once you get their departmental requirements, HRM develops
for MARKETING,
-recruitment /selection plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-training plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-rewards plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-development plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-payroll plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
- performance management plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
-staff/organization communication plans / programs/ procedures/ priorities
etc etc
-HR POLICIES
-HR PROCEDURES
-HR PRACTICES.
-HR PLANS
ETC.
===============================================
Example of HR ALIGNING with MARKETING OBJECTIVE/STRATEGY.
Marketing Strategy: Expand into the global market.
Marketing Objective: Phase 1 enter the european market.
Obtain 2% of the market in the first 18 months.
----------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------
Marketing Objective : Gain 2 % market share in the first 18 months.
Marketing Strategy : Develop new products .
Develop product promotions, with mutilingual
media plan.
Marketing Needs: *Key employees will need to be able to communicate
in a second language of europe.
*Product managers need orientation in european
culture.
WHAT HR CAN DO FOR PRODUCT MANAGEMENT?
HR contribution: *Language training for product managers
*European culture orientation for product managers
*European economy orientation for product managers
*Rewrite the product manager's job description/ job competences/
job specification.
===============================================
Sales Objective : Gain Sales of $X in the first 18 months.
Sales Strategy : *Sell current products in euro market
*Sell new products in euro market.
*Determine new market segments.
*Develop a range of KEY accounts.
Sales Needs: *Key employees will need to be able to communicate
in a second language of europe.
*Sales managers/team need orientation in european
culture.
*Sales managers/team need orientation in european
economy.
*Sales team need sales skills/ approach.
*Sales team need an understanding of
euro customer buying pattern.
*New sales team recruitment.
WHAT HR CAN DO FOR SALES MANAGEMENT?
HR contribution: *Language training for sales team.
*European culture orientation for the sales team.
*European economy orientation for the sales team.
*Euro market orientation for the sales team.
*Euro selling skills for the sales team.
*Euro customer servicing orientation for the sales team.
*Rewrite the sales manager's job description/ job competences/
job specification.
*Rewrite the sales team's job description/ job competences/
job specification.
*develop a new performance standards for sales team.
*develop a new rewards incentive system.
----------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------
In this way, you can design/ develop all HR activities/ programs
and align them with MARKETING DEPARTMENTS' various
sections like
-sales promotions section
-advertising section
-merchandising section
-channel management section
-marketing research section
-etc.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now as a HR manager, you know
-what the marketing / sales objectives / strategies are
-what the marketing /sales needs are
-what the HR contribution should be
and also what/ how your HR plans impact the
marketing departments results.
----------------------------------------------------------------- ---------
TO ACHIEVE THIS, YOU AS A HR MANAGER
MUST WORK VERY CLOSELY WITH THE
MARKETING DEPARTMENT MANAGERS.
HOPE THIS IS USEFUL TO YOU
REGARDS
LEO LINGHAM
From India, Mumbai
Hi Rajat, What is the difference between marketing of HR to potential candidates and HR Branding??? Or are they the same concept?? Plzz Help!!! Thanx and Regards, Nitya
From India, Mumbai
From India, Mumbai
Hello Mr. Lingham
Thank you so much for your views regarding my query.
Actually i have to prepare a presenation on a opic related to the usefullness of HR in marketing... can u suggest something.
Thanks and Regards
Pooja
From India, Indore
Thank you so much for your views regarding my query.
Actually i have to prepare a presenation on a opic related to the usefullness of HR in marketing... can u suggest something.
Thanks and Regards
Pooja
From India, Indore
Hi Nitya, Well let me put this way marketing of HR to potential candidates is a subset of HR Branding ..which encompasses many other activities.. Cheers, Rajat
From India, Pune
From India, Pune
HR AND MARKETING
HERE IS SOME MORE USFUL GUIDELINES ON THE ABOVE
SUBJECT.
Historically brands and branding were limited to the marketing and corporate
Marketing. Marketing emphasis was external communications and customer
Insights. This has limited internal influence on the employees’ day to day activities.
Now corporate marketing has come to realization that the collaboration of
HR with the brand development could be a very important marketing tool
For the organization.
---------------------------------------------------------
Both HR and MARKETING are realizing that in creating sustainable change
Inside And outside the organization, the two functions need each other to
Survive.The two together can create a culture and related behaviors that are
On-brand, on-strategy which can deliver a strong bottom line results.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
In fact there are compelling reasons for MARKETING to team up with
HR, because
-HR’s ability to attach BRAND message in all dealings with various
departments
-to provide marketing / brand access to all employees.
-HR functions closely/ cross functionally / company wide.
-HR’s strength lies in delivery / communication.
HR can influence employees through,
-recruiting
-induction
-orientation
-training
-development
-performance management
-compensation
By infusing the content of the brand into the programs,
A brand based culture starts to emerge.
--------------------------------------------------------
Bridge the Gap
So how can companies bridge the gap between marketing and HR, brand and culture, and inside and outside in order to better assimilate the brand internally?,
Strategic alignment of company objectives, marketing and employee objectives, and ultimately communications to all constituents is the most critical prerequisite for success. It's not enough that marketing requests HR's assistance in implementing brand values across the firm or that HR requests marketing's help in adapting tools for HR purposes. If the goal is to deliver greater business value, the two departments need to work together seamlessly. The first step in forging this relationship is for each department to develop respect for the other's expertise. A mutual understanding can be achieved by slating a meeting of the minds where strategies can be exchanged, synergies can be discussed, and overlaps in responsibilities can be resolved. The alignment is best developed around the business objectives, not the departmental objectives. It's not about raising awareness with customers, nor is it about diversity. It's about delivering more profits to the bottom line.
------------------------------------------------------------
Once marketing and HR are philosophically aligned, specific strategies for attracting and retaining employees and for the integration of the brand throughout the organization need to be discussed and agreed on. The two groups must proceed with a shared objective and a willingness to work together for a common purpose.
A shared objective, for example, might be to turn the company into a technology leader. On the HR side, supporting this objective would involve evaluating employee characteristics, rewards and compensation, management systems, and cultural values. Marketing's task is to specify the traits that are critical from a brand perspective (e.g., employees need to be creative and constantly pushing the envelope), then work with HR to define how these are translated into behaviors that are embedded into processes and systems. T'hat's because the proof lies in the execution, not just in the promise.
Another example of a shared objective might be generating employee excitement about recent company achievements or changes in strategic direction. Often, internal campaigns or employee contests are held where marketing leverages its work in external communications, or maybe sponsorship relationships, to bring additional flavor or interest to HR's employee activities.
After the two groups have developed their strategies, it comes down to implementation. The first step in this phase is to assess what needs to be done collectively and as individual functions. This is the time to see if things like rewards and compensation systems, training curriculums, and brand and recruitment communications are aligned with HR and marketing strategies. If not, this is the time to see that it's done. Once the tasks to align marketing and HR are outlined, a plan should be created that details how the brand is reflected across all key initiatives and the scheduled rollout for each initiative, complete. with a summary of the roles and responsibilities of all those involved, sample brand actions, and/or language to be used.
Executing the plans becomes the responsibility of the functions themselves. However, there should be some joint management structure that enables frequent assessment of progress and required course corrections. This can be a steering committee made up of senior representatives from the two departments or it can be more of a joint working group that rolls up its sleeves and meets frequently to hammer out progress details and enable each others' programs.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Brand Alignment
The brand's alignment is critical for the implementation phase to be effective. A key step is for marketing to stop talking about the "brand." The reality is that "brand" is merely a buzzword to many in the organization, and discussions around it often generate indifference. A better way to infuse brand into business practices is to relate it directly to employee benefits using language like: "If you act in this way, you will achieve these results."
[ For example, telling a business machine salesperson that they have to treat their clients with kid gloves may not get the same response as if you said that their clients are looking to place business with someone that really takes care of their requirements.]
It's also essential for marketing to be proactive in sharing the promises they intend to communicate internally with employees before the external market actually hears them.
BMW Group, for example, has had great success cultivating
enthusiasm and motivating employees by sharing its advertising
campaigns with employees before they hit the general market.
At Southwest Airlines,
HR and marketing developed a list of eight employee "freedoms" to summarize the employment experience at Southwest, thereby creating an internal side to the external brand story. The brand identity of "freedom" internally has become: "At Southwest Airlines, freedom begins with me." As a result, employees know exactly what kind of experience they are to create. Successful brand alignment, as such examples illustrate, will help employees and the company as a whole to naturally act on brand with an onbrand customer experience to follow.
-------------------------------------------------------
The monitoring and management of the collaborative efforts is ongoing, and marketing and HR should provide updates on progress and relevant information regularly -at a minimum once per quarter. Measuring results can be done in a variety of ways, but conducting quantitative surveys and holding focus groups are two of the most effective. And while HR should continue to monitor the pulse of employees, marketing must stay focused on how best to deliver against the needs of the company's stakeholders. The combined results of internal understanding of the brand, quality of delivery at critical touch points, and customer awareness/ loyalty to the brand should be reported back to the leadership team to ensure they have the necessary information to keep brand and business strategy in alignment.
HR and marketing might not be natural bedfellows, but experience shows that, when they do cooperate and work together, an increase in successful recruiting, overall employee understanding, and support of the brand (and thus the work of the marketing group) follows. With a simple formula of communications and coordination, companies can create a strong foundation on which to build a compelling brand and strong culture and drive significant business impact.
----------------------------------------------------------------
HR's primary constituents are the company's internal employees. With that audience, its work is truly cross functional and company wide. Therefore, in realizing that a brand's strength lies in its delivery and not just its communication, HR can be an effective conduit for influencing
employees through recruiting,
new employee orientation,
training and development,
performance evaluation,
and compensation.
One company, world class, makes a concerted effort to present a united front during new hire orientation, giving new employees a full day of introduction to the firm that includes basics about the facilities, the history of the company, the vision and key objectives for the future, and the strategies to achieve the stated vision. This is a most opportune time to involve the new employee in what the firm's customers want and what the firm is doing to satisfy them. Imagine a onehour discussion where a video is played of customers speaking about their key needs and wants. This video is then followed up by how the firm is planning to address these needs. External communications can then be shown, viewed in the context of solving these important issues. The combination creates a powerful story, enabling new employees to under stand the customer and business better, understand they must behave in a certain way, and see the promises being made to customers by the firm. HR and marketing are completely intertwined in the story, and the result is a new group of brand ambassadors.
A global technology firm that used an interesting contest to create deeper appreciation and understanding for the new brand they were developing. HR and marketing teamed to develop a series of CD ROM trading cards that had questions about how people would act if they were the brand. Once five questions were answered correctly, the card was traded for another. The first people to collect all six cards won a prize. This created an international network based on the ideals of the brand. Cards went back and forth to all corners of the globe. The more people got into it, the more distribution the cards received. The end result was an incredibly effective internal communications program.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
HR can play a key role in helping marketing develop internal communications that demonstrate
How employees "live" the brand. The concept of internal role models is one of the most effective ways to enlist a broader population of employees. Traditionally, in change management initiatives, these people are called "change agents." They are people that embody and live the ideals of the brand and are individuals respected by many people in the organization. By identifying these individuals and aligning their messages and behaviors, a very powerful force of internal role models is created for employees to emulate. No other function is more capable of identifying and encouraging these employees to participate than HR.
------------------------------------------------------
Marketing Supports HR
The HR department also benefits from close collaboration with its marketing colleagues. By making its target audiences, positioning promises, and marketing strategies available to HR, marketing can bolster HR's ability to attract and retain employees that believe in and will support the company's brand and business strategies.
HR is increasingly discovering how marketing can help it attract and retain employees, which is critical in the ongoing competitive war for talent. Research has shown that a variety, of factors play into what attracts the best candidates to a career opportunity, many of which rank equal to or higher than financial compensation. Sought after candidates want to work for a company that reflects their own ideals and aspirations and maintains a strong customer focus.
A global services company recently conducted research on its recruiting efforts and found that there has been an evolution in how potential employees look at career opportunities. For example, it's no longer good enough to offer a long career; recruits today are seeking companies that clearly help them build their own market profiles. Candidates are seeking companies they can place on their resume that will build their overall market value, which suggests that marketing and the brand play an ever increasing role in attracting the best talent. The brand is becoming a primary decision tool for recruits when considering a new career opportunity.
-------------------------------------------------------------
It's important not to forget that employees are often also your customers. They are learning about the organization from the outside world as well through their exposure to the company's external communications. Many HR departments have realized the potential here:
IBM [ when it launched e-business),
JPMorgan (with the "I am JPMorgan" campaign),
and Southwest Airlines
all spoke to their employees through their external advertising initiatives. These efforts built a great internal sense of pride in the companies and clearly communicated what the organization hoped its employees would deliver to customers. It also communicated a promise that included the employees.
This has elevated the importance of branding and increased HR's reliance on the marketing department to provide it with processes for developing internal and external communications that support the brand promises the company is making in the marketplace. The marketing group's indepth understanding of the customer and its ability to develop communications targeted at this group can help HR determine what tools and messages will help current and potential employees deliver against the brand promises.
HR can accomplish this by leveraging the credibility marketing has acquired as a result of its focus on the customer. Generally, the marketing department "owns" market and customer research and thus has the greatest insight into the needs of the market.
"Whether employees believe in the concept of brand or not, they will always
listen when being told what their customers want and how best to deliver
against these needs. Providing them the sort of actionable data that's a specialty
of marketing will help turn employee attention to other areas that support the
needs and goals of the business, in turn making them ambassadors of the brand.
==============================
Brand Ambassadors
But creating such sweeping attitudinal change can be problematic. Changing behaviors is not a simple task, and many impediments block a successful implementation. These impediments include compensation systems that are not aligned with brand building, lack of senior management commitment, desire for immediate results, and management vs. leadership of an initiative.
Imagine if you worked in a call center for an insurance company. Typically, you would be compensated based on the number of calls you handle, not the depth and length of the calls. Now imagine the insurance company came out with a brand strategy where the company would understand customer need s better than anyone else. The compensation structure for the call center representative is actually prohibiting the desired experience from taking place. There is virtually no way customers are going to perceive that they are well understood if they are handled according to the current measurement system. While this example is somewhat simplistic, it's illustrative of a problem faced by organizations of all sizes. How do you align the motivating factors of compensation with the promises the company must keep with customers?
Not only do HR and marketing need to know how the brand translates into specific employee competencies, but they also need to assess how these competencies deliver convincing customer experiences through distinct employee actions.
One company established a small task force with representatives from both HR and marketing to identify what competencies the target employee should have from the brand, business, and HR perspective. It was a rather lengthy but important process, as those competencies would become the foundation for the company's compensation and recruitment processes and therefore establish a behavioral role model. After primary and secondary research among employees and customers and multiple global workshops and teleconferences, a new target employee emerged. The target came complete with competencies, associated actions, and professional experience requirements by level.
Having gone through the process together, marketing and HR had full clarity concerning what competencies this employee possessed and how these competencies were manifested in specific actions. HR could then easily proceed to align the compensation models so the right behaviors would be nurtured and rewarded. Marketing could start to think about the training programs, messages, and reward schemes that would further build the behaviors that supported the brand most strongly This is the type of teamwork that creates strong customer experiences .
EXAMPLE : Hertz Corp.[ car rental business ]
HOPE THIS WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU.
REGARDS
LEO LINGHAM
From India, Mumbai
HERE IS SOME MORE USFUL GUIDELINES ON THE ABOVE
SUBJECT.
Historically brands and branding were limited to the marketing and corporate
Marketing. Marketing emphasis was external communications and customer
Insights. This has limited internal influence on the employees’ day to day activities.
Now corporate marketing has come to realization that the collaboration of
HR with the brand development could be a very important marketing tool
For the organization.
---------------------------------------------------------
Both HR and MARKETING are realizing that in creating sustainable change
Inside And outside the organization, the two functions need each other to
Survive.The two together can create a culture and related behaviors that are
On-brand, on-strategy which can deliver a strong bottom line results.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
In fact there are compelling reasons for MARKETING to team up with
HR, because
-HR’s ability to attach BRAND message in all dealings with various
departments
-to provide marketing / brand access to all employees.
-HR functions closely/ cross functionally / company wide.
-HR’s strength lies in delivery / communication.
HR can influence employees through,
-recruiting
-induction
-orientation
-training
-development
-performance management
-compensation
By infusing the content of the brand into the programs,
A brand based culture starts to emerge.
--------------------------------------------------------
Bridge the Gap
So how can companies bridge the gap between marketing and HR, brand and culture, and inside and outside in order to better assimilate the brand internally?,
Strategic alignment of company objectives, marketing and employee objectives, and ultimately communications to all constituents is the most critical prerequisite for success. It's not enough that marketing requests HR's assistance in implementing brand values across the firm or that HR requests marketing's help in adapting tools for HR purposes. If the goal is to deliver greater business value, the two departments need to work together seamlessly. The first step in forging this relationship is for each department to develop respect for the other's expertise. A mutual understanding can be achieved by slating a meeting of the minds where strategies can be exchanged, synergies can be discussed, and overlaps in responsibilities can be resolved. The alignment is best developed around the business objectives, not the departmental objectives. It's not about raising awareness with customers, nor is it about diversity. It's about delivering more profits to the bottom line.
------------------------------------------------------------
Once marketing and HR are philosophically aligned, specific strategies for attracting and retaining employees and for the integration of the brand throughout the organization need to be discussed and agreed on. The two groups must proceed with a shared objective and a willingness to work together for a common purpose.
A shared objective, for example, might be to turn the company into a technology leader. On the HR side, supporting this objective would involve evaluating employee characteristics, rewards and compensation, management systems, and cultural values. Marketing's task is to specify the traits that are critical from a brand perspective (e.g., employees need to be creative and constantly pushing the envelope), then work with HR to define how these are translated into behaviors that are embedded into processes and systems. T'hat's because the proof lies in the execution, not just in the promise.
Another example of a shared objective might be generating employee excitement about recent company achievements or changes in strategic direction. Often, internal campaigns or employee contests are held where marketing leverages its work in external communications, or maybe sponsorship relationships, to bring additional flavor or interest to HR's employee activities.
After the two groups have developed their strategies, it comes down to implementation. The first step in this phase is to assess what needs to be done collectively and as individual functions. This is the time to see if things like rewards and compensation systems, training curriculums, and brand and recruitment communications are aligned with HR and marketing strategies. If not, this is the time to see that it's done. Once the tasks to align marketing and HR are outlined, a plan should be created that details how the brand is reflected across all key initiatives and the scheduled rollout for each initiative, complete. with a summary of the roles and responsibilities of all those involved, sample brand actions, and/or language to be used.
Executing the plans becomes the responsibility of the functions themselves. However, there should be some joint management structure that enables frequent assessment of progress and required course corrections. This can be a steering committee made up of senior representatives from the two departments or it can be more of a joint working group that rolls up its sleeves and meets frequently to hammer out progress details and enable each others' programs.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Brand Alignment
The brand's alignment is critical for the implementation phase to be effective. A key step is for marketing to stop talking about the "brand." The reality is that "brand" is merely a buzzword to many in the organization, and discussions around it often generate indifference. A better way to infuse brand into business practices is to relate it directly to employee benefits using language like: "If you act in this way, you will achieve these results."
[ For example, telling a business machine salesperson that they have to treat their clients with kid gloves may not get the same response as if you said that their clients are looking to place business with someone that really takes care of their requirements.]
It's also essential for marketing to be proactive in sharing the promises they intend to communicate internally with employees before the external market actually hears them.
BMW Group, for example, has had great success cultivating
enthusiasm and motivating employees by sharing its advertising
campaigns with employees before they hit the general market.
At Southwest Airlines,
HR and marketing developed a list of eight employee "freedoms" to summarize the employment experience at Southwest, thereby creating an internal side to the external brand story. The brand identity of "freedom" internally has become: "At Southwest Airlines, freedom begins with me." As a result, employees know exactly what kind of experience they are to create. Successful brand alignment, as such examples illustrate, will help employees and the company as a whole to naturally act on brand with an onbrand customer experience to follow.
-------------------------------------------------------
The monitoring and management of the collaborative efforts is ongoing, and marketing and HR should provide updates on progress and relevant information regularly -at a minimum once per quarter. Measuring results can be done in a variety of ways, but conducting quantitative surveys and holding focus groups are two of the most effective. And while HR should continue to monitor the pulse of employees, marketing must stay focused on how best to deliver against the needs of the company's stakeholders. The combined results of internal understanding of the brand, quality of delivery at critical touch points, and customer awareness/ loyalty to the brand should be reported back to the leadership team to ensure they have the necessary information to keep brand and business strategy in alignment.
HR and marketing might not be natural bedfellows, but experience shows that, when they do cooperate and work together, an increase in successful recruiting, overall employee understanding, and support of the brand (and thus the work of the marketing group) follows. With a simple formula of communications and coordination, companies can create a strong foundation on which to build a compelling brand and strong culture and drive significant business impact.
----------------------------------------------------------------
HR's primary constituents are the company's internal employees. With that audience, its work is truly cross functional and company wide. Therefore, in realizing that a brand's strength lies in its delivery and not just its communication, HR can be an effective conduit for influencing
employees through recruiting,
new employee orientation,
training and development,
performance evaluation,
and compensation.
One company, world class, makes a concerted effort to present a united front during new hire orientation, giving new employees a full day of introduction to the firm that includes basics about the facilities, the history of the company, the vision and key objectives for the future, and the strategies to achieve the stated vision. This is a most opportune time to involve the new employee in what the firm's customers want and what the firm is doing to satisfy them. Imagine a onehour discussion where a video is played of customers speaking about their key needs and wants. This video is then followed up by how the firm is planning to address these needs. External communications can then be shown, viewed in the context of solving these important issues. The combination creates a powerful story, enabling new employees to under stand the customer and business better, understand they must behave in a certain way, and see the promises being made to customers by the firm. HR and marketing are completely intertwined in the story, and the result is a new group of brand ambassadors.
A global technology firm that used an interesting contest to create deeper appreciation and understanding for the new brand they were developing. HR and marketing teamed to develop a series of CD ROM trading cards that had questions about how people would act if they were the brand. Once five questions were answered correctly, the card was traded for another. The first people to collect all six cards won a prize. This created an international network based on the ideals of the brand. Cards went back and forth to all corners of the globe. The more people got into it, the more distribution the cards received. The end result was an incredibly effective internal communications program.
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HR can play a key role in helping marketing develop internal communications that demonstrate
How employees "live" the brand. The concept of internal role models is one of the most effective ways to enlist a broader population of employees. Traditionally, in change management initiatives, these people are called "change agents." They are people that embody and live the ideals of the brand and are individuals respected by many people in the organization. By identifying these individuals and aligning their messages and behaviors, a very powerful force of internal role models is created for employees to emulate. No other function is more capable of identifying and encouraging these employees to participate than HR.
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Marketing Supports HR
The HR department also benefits from close collaboration with its marketing colleagues. By making its target audiences, positioning promises, and marketing strategies available to HR, marketing can bolster HR's ability to attract and retain employees that believe in and will support the company's brand and business strategies.
HR is increasingly discovering how marketing can help it attract and retain employees, which is critical in the ongoing competitive war for talent. Research has shown that a variety, of factors play into what attracts the best candidates to a career opportunity, many of which rank equal to or higher than financial compensation. Sought after candidates want to work for a company that reflects their own ideals and aspirations and maintains a strong customer focus.
A global services company recently conducted research on its recruiting efforts and found that there has been an evolution in how potential employees look at career opportunities. For example, it's no longer good enough to offer a long career; recruits today are seeking companies that clearly help them build their own market profiles. Candidates are seeking companies they can place on their resume that will build their overall market value, which suggests that marketing and the brand play an ever increasing role in attracting the best talent. The brand is becoming a primary decision tool for recruits when considering a new career opportunity.
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It's important not to forget that employees are often also your customers. They are learning about the organization from the outside world as well through their exposure to the company's external communications. Many HR departments have realized the potential here:
IBM [ when it launched e-business),
JPMorgan (with the "I am JPMorgan" campaign),
and Southwest Airlines
all spoke to their employees through their external advertising initiatives. These efforts built a great internal sense of pride in the companies and clearly communicated what the organization hoped its employees would deliver to customers. It also communicated a promise that included the employees.
This has elevated the importance of branding and increased HR's reliance on the marketing department to provide it with processes for developing internal and external communications that support the brand promises the company is making in the marketplace. The marketing group's indepth understanding of the customer and its ability to develop communications targeted at this group can help HR determine what tools and messages will help current and potential employees deliver against the brand promises.
HR can accomplish this by leveraging the credibility marketing has acquired as a result of its focus on the customer. Generally, the marketing department "owns" market and customer research and thus has the greatest insight into the needs of the market.
"Whether employees believe in the concept of brand or not, they will always
listen when being told what their customers want and how best to deliver
against these needs. Providing them the sort of actionable data that's a specialty
of marketing will help turn employee attention to other areas that support the
needs and goals of the business, in turn making them ambassadors of the brand.
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Brand Ambassadors
But creating such sweeping attitudinal change can be problematic. Changing behaviors is not a simple task, and many impediments block a successful implementation. These impediments include compensation systems that are not aligned with brand building, lack of senior management commitment, desire for immediate results, and management vs. leadership of an initiative.
Imagine if you worked in a call center for an insurance company. Typically, you would be compensated based on the number of calls you handle, not the depth and length of the calls. Now imagine the insurance company came out with a brand strategy where the company would understand customer need s better than anyone else. The compensation structure for the call center representative is actually prohibiting the desired experience from taking place. There is virtually no way customers are going to perceive that they are well understood if they are handled according to the current measurement system. While this example is somewhat simplistic, it's illustrative of a problem faced by organizations of all sizes. How do you align the motivating factors of compensation with the promises the company must keep with customers?
Not only do HR and marketing need to know how the brand translates into specific employee competencies, but they also need to assess how these competencies deliver convincing customer experiences through distinct employee actions.
One company established a small task force with representatives from both HR and marketing to identify what competencies the target employee should have from the brand, business, and HR perspective. It was a rather lengthy but important process, as those competencies would become the foundation for the company's compensation and recruitment processes and therefore establish a behavioral role model. After primary and secondary research among employees and customers and multiple global workshops and teleconferences, a new target employee emerged. The target came complete with competencies, associated actions, and professional experience requirements by level.
Having gone through the process together, marketing and HR had full clarity concerning what competencies this employee possessed and how these competencies were manifested in specific actions. HR could then easily proceed to align the compensation models so the right behaviors would be nurtured and rewarded. Marketing could start to think about the training programs, messages, and reward schemes that would further build the behaviors that supported the brand most strongly This is the type of teamwork that creates strong customer experiences .
EXAMPLE : Hertz Corp.[ car rental business ]
HOPE THIS WILL BE USEFUL TO YOU.
REGARDS
LEO LINGHAM
From India, Mumbai
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