How to Set Goals for Your EVP

WRITTEN BY: Jörgen Sundberg

NBCUniversal is a massive, massive organization. But what happens when such a large company needs to develop and activate a new EVP (Employer Value Proposition)?

That was the challenge facing Anne Hurley, Director of Talent Branding at NBCUniversal. We brought her on the Employer Branding Podcast to talk about how she executed an EVP refresh at one of the largest multinational media companies in the world, and how they build the flexibility to activate it across a wide variety of brands and countries.

Setting Goals for Employer Branding

NBCUniversal is even bigger than you think. It comprises over twenty different businesses across thirty countries including motion pictures, TV productions, a leading television stations group, world-renowned theme parks, and a premium ad-supported streaming service. There are many different brands within the whole, from Unverisal theme parks to E! News to Fandango. So how do you articulate an EVP that works for all those different brands and localities?

The process started with laying out the Talent Acquisition organization’s goals as a whole. They decided on setting objectives around brand awareness and engagement, employee experience, DEI, and recruiting excellence. These goalposts helped steer the process, defining what they were trying to get out of their new EVP and how they should measure success across all brands.

Building Flexibility into an EVP

“We have to go to market with a consistent story because we are a decentralized company since our properties operate on their own,” Hurley says, “our job is to influence them at each point of the candidate lifecycle.” For their EVP, they need to create something that brought everything together but was flexible enough to work just as well for NBC News as it did for Peacock streaming.

They started with a research phase by hosting employee roundtables, looking at internal data collection, and engaging with external vendors. They then took those findings and got together with other internal groups like Corporate Creative and Corporate Communications to distill everything into the tagline: “Here you can.”

“It’s simple, right? But that’s why it works,” Hurley says, “it acts as a ‘fill in the blank’ where we can insert language at the end of the phrase based on personas, skillsets, or interests. It doesn’t need to compete with our consumer brands—it’s simply complimentary.” So for E! News, it might be articulated as “Here you can be Pop Cultured,” or if they wanted to speak to their DEI initiatives it might become “Here you can be authentically you.” Their EVP is powerful because it can be articulated differently to different personas.

International EVP Activation

In addition to developing an EVP that works for many different brands, Hurley’s Talent Branding organization has been working to make localization a priority. “Our brand does not resonate with people in the UK or Germany or France in the way it resonates with people in the US,” Hurley says, so they set to work creating a global toolkit to bring everything together.

Hurley and her team started with focus groups to more clearly identify needs in each global territory, and used that information to create localized assets that would align with the organization’s EVP while sharing the same look and feel across all languages. They worked closely with local brand champions to develop these resources, which in turn gives them everything they need to create their own localized, inclusive content.

Connect with Other Employer Branding Professionals

Large organizations come with a unique set of challenges for employer branding and talent acquisition professionals, but there are best practices for all of us on developing and activating an EVP. Be clear about your internal goals before you get started, do the research to get a complete picture of your organization, and make sure to bring everyone to the table when the time comes to take the next steps.

Finally, don’t hesitate to reach out to other folks working in the employer brand space. “I’ve made a lot of connections by simply pinging the guests on this podcast,” Hurley says. We try to include a way to get in touch with all of our guests, so don’t be afraid to make a connection.

To follow Anne Hurley’s work in employer brand, connect with her on LinkedIn. To identify the values and culture you want to create in your own company, get in touch.


STAY CONNECTED.
DATA-DRIVEN EMPLOYER
BRAND INSIGHTS.

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.

SUBSCRIBE FOR EMAIL UPDATES

Play Video

Recent Articles

How the LEGO Group Identifies Talent to Find the Right Fit

Some brands will always hold a special place in our hearts. But just because you’re hiring for someone’s dream job doesn’t guarantee they’ll be the right fit for your team. In this episode of the Employer Branding Podcast, we talk...

How the Employer Brand Index Helps Experian Measure ROI on Talent Attraction

Anything data-related is of huge interest to us here at Link Humans. So what better person to talk to than Doug Kelsall, Global Recruitment Marketer and Branding Director at Experian? For this episode of the Employer Branding Podcast, we learn...

A Year in Review: The Most Stable Areas of Employer Brand and the Impact of Remote Work

Recognizing the importance of a strong employer brand in attracting and retaining talent (Bali & Dixit, 2016), Link Humans has for several years provided its clients insight into how their employer brand is perceived via its Employer Brand Index (EBI)....