When Lisa Chartier started the employer branding team at Philips she was flying solo. Over time, she built up a strategic function that now spans the globe.
She’s the Global Employer Brand and Recruitment Marketing Lead at Philips, and we sit down with her to learn how she established the capability, justified budgets, hired a team, showed results, negotiated peaks and troughs and what the future holds.
Have a listen to the interview below, keep reading for a summary and be sure to subscribe to the Employer Branding Podcast.
Listen on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Google Play or SoundCloud.
Or TVs, headphones and light bulbs… In short, Philips today is purely a Health Technology company. We produce innovative software products, services, and solutions to improve people’s health and well-being across the health continuum. Everything from prevention to consumers and diagnosis, to treatment and recovery as patients.
We have a big awareness/understanding issue when it comes to our brand (consumer brand as well as employer brand). We are also a company in constant transformation, operating in some of the most competitive industry and talent segments. Our work must differentiate Philips and win vs. other companies vying for the same talent if Philips is going to be able to execute its strategy. Our work is what allows talent attraction capability for these priority segments to move from the “risk” category to the “strategic advantage” category in the boardroom.
Employer branding did not exist internally in a formal sense at Phillips before I joined. Shortly after I joined, my boss was promoted to a global role so the goal was to build capability for North America initially as a pilot and then scale globally if successful. It was a great opportunity to fulfill the entrepreneur in me.
We started out as just a small team initially just playing the role of developing an employer brand strategy as a means to simply execute our talent acquisition strategy more effectively. Now we are a bigger team that is actually influencing our global people strategy and actually shaping the “product” we have to offer talent in the market in many ways. So, we have a much bigger voice in the company.
Quite simply, we have 4 pillars of our strategy:
Our operating model focuses on developing and deploying employer branding content on key career channels. We determine what those are at a global and local level each year. For 2018, our global key career channels are our career website, LinkedIn, Glassdoor, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google, our talent CRM, our own employees and select employer award publishers. This year we have also included Instagram and Snapchat in our global key channel mix for our younger talent segments and plan to leverage content syndication platforms like Taboola and Outbrain to enable a marked shift in our strategy from traditional advertising to a more candidate-friendly content marketing approach.
EVERYTHING. It’s such an exciting time to be part of this space! I think we’ll see:
Connect with Lisa on LinkedIn
Our newsletter is exclusively curated by our CEO, Jörgen Sundberg, for leaders who make decisions about talent. Subscribe for updates on The Employer Branding Podcast, new articles, eBooks, research and events we’re working on.