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Employer branding : glossary definition | Habefast

Habefsat Employer Brand Glossary

Employer Branding : definition and HR relevance

Employer branding is the image that future candidates and current employees have of your company. Its goal is to establish a positive perception of your organization as an employer, in order to attract and retain top talent.

This brand management concept, when applied to human resources, first emerged in the 1990s and has since grown significantly to help companies appeal to the best candidates and respond to the talent shortage.

Today, employer branding plays an increasingly central role in recruitment strategies. With Generation Z entering the job market, candidates’ expectations are shifting—they now seek more authenticity, transparency, and opportunities for growth. This creates a new challenge for companies, as they face a generation that is more demanding and attentive to employer reputation and commitments.

For recruiters, the issue is no longer a lack of applications, but the difficulty in attracting qualified, motivated candidates who align with the company’s culture. As a result, building a strong employer brand has become a strategic priority. Many companies are rethinking their internal organization and creating dedicated roles or missions to lead employer branding efforts, with the goal of attracting, engaging, and retaining talent.

Employer Branding : HR marketing challenges and beyond

Employer branding sits at the intersection of marketing and human resources — it applies brand principles (communication, image, reputation) to the HR field.

It reflects the organization’s DNA as an employer — its values, mission, and story — and aims to position the company as an employer of choice for top talent.

As mentioned earlier, by cultivating a strong employer brand, a company seeks to attract high-quality candidates while retaining its existing employees in a job market marked by a “war for talent.” It is therefore a strategic lever for both recruitment and employee engagement.

However, employer branding is not solely the responsibility of the HR department. On the contrary, it is a cross-functional project that involves the entire organization — including top management.

It reflects the company as a whole and must be supported by all its stakeholders: leadership, HR, communication teams, managers, and employees. A strong commitment from the leadership team is essential to align the company’s messaging and identity with the reality on the ground.

In practical terms, this means that recruiters, HR communicators, and operational managers must work closely together to build a consistent and compelling Employee Value Proposition (EVP).

Internal implications and necessary developments

Developing an employer branding strategy can require significant internal changes to a company’s organization and management practices. The goal is to ensure that the experience lived by employees aligns with the promises made to candidates — which may involve rethinking internal processes and ways of working.

Among the most common developments, we find:

  • Internal Reorganization and New Roles

    Implementing an employer branding approach often goes hand in hand with improved coordination between departments (HR, marketing, communication). Some companies create cross-functional teams or appoint a dedicated Employer Branding Manager to lead the initiative.

    This new HR role is responsible for co-developing and promoting the company’s employer brand. Usually reporting to the HR department, their mission is to ensure that the company’s intentions align with the real, lived experiences of employees before deploying the associated communication strategy.

    The creation of such a role illustrates the need for rethought internal governance, where HR and marketing work hand in hand under the direction of senior leadership.

  • Career Paths and Internal Mobility

    A strong employer brand relies on providing employees with opportunities for growth.

    Companies are increasingly redesigning career paths to make them more attractive and transparent. This includes defining structured development tracks, implementing training plans, communicating on internal mobility opportunities, and conducting regular check-ins to support individual development.

    Current employees, who act as the company’s first ambassadors, expect visible and concrete career progression. Internal assessments often reveal a need for more structured support and training — which the organization must be ready to address.

  • Evolving Management Practices

    Management styles must evolve in line with the employer brand, as leadership practices have a direct impact on team engagement and well-being. A management approach that is too rigid or distant can contradict employer messaging around empathy, autonomy, or collaboration.

    More and more companies are embracing participative management, based on trust, autonomy, and involving employees in key decisions. This leadership style supports professional growth while fostering commitment to shared goals. At the same time, work organization is becoming more flexible to meet modern expectations: remote work, adjustable schedules, empathetic leadership attentive to individual needs, and respect for work-life balance.

    All these initiatives contribute to improving quality of life at work and ensuring that employees’ day-to-day experience is aligned with the values promoted by the company. The result is a company culture that is more consistent with its external messaging—thereby reinforcing the authenticity of the employer brand

At Habefast, our agency specialized in employer branding, we have developed a proprietary audit that gives companies a clear overview of their current employer image and digital presence. This audit is based on key evaluation checkpoints and leads to concrete, actionable recommendations aligned with your recruitment challenges.

If you’re looking for support in building a strong and consistent employer branding strategy, we offer a custom action plan, tailored to your internal values, company culture, and HR objectives.

Examples of employer branding actions implemented in companies

Many concrete actions can be deployed to bring an employer branding strategy to life on a daily basis. Here are some meaningful examples:

  1. Employee ambassador programs (Employee Advocacy)

    Engaging employees to become brand ambassadors, especially through their personal communication (e.g., social media). Employees are encouraged to share their experiences authentically — testimonials, behind-the-scenes content, personal pride and team successes — which humanizes and reinforces the credibility of the employer’s message. These messages are often better perceived than those coming solely from leadership, as they are more personal and sincere.

    A well-structured ambassador program may include training on social media usage, encouragement to post on LinkedIn, or internal campaigns promoting the sharing of company initiatives. In addition to increasing the visibility of the employer brand, such programs benefit employees themselves by helping them develop their personal branding and gain internal recognition.

  2. Redesigning HR processes (recruitment and onboarding)

    Developing a strong employer brand often involves a complete review of HR processes to ensure a smooth and positive experience for both candidates and employees.

    For example, the recruitment process may be rethought and simplified: shorter response times, easier online applications, better follow-up communication, etc. Many companies have modernized their methods by adopting digital tools (ATS, online forms) to make hiring faster, simpler, and more efficient.

    Stronger involvement of operational managers at every stage of the recruitment process is also encouraged to ensure consistent candidate evaluation and effective transmission of corporate culture. Once a candidate is hired, the focus shifts to onboarding: implementing structured integration programs (welcome paths, mentoring, initial training) helps newcomers quickly understand and embrace the company’s culture.

  3. Collaborative tools and enterprise social networks

    The rollout of internal collaborative tools is another effective way to strengthen employer branding. Providing employees with modern communication and teamworking platforms fosters a more participative and connected environment.

    Enterprise social networks, for example, enable open and horizontal communication among colleagues, break down hierarchical barriers, and strengthen team cohesion and company culture. These platforms allow employees to share information, successes, and best practices, building a strong sense of belonging. They also support project-based work and facilitate the rapid sharing of internal news. By encouraging transparency and collaboration, these tools help create a positive work atmosphere where employees feel heard and involved — a key element of a strong employer brand. In fact, such platforms often increase employees’ pride in belonging and reduce their desire to look elsewhere, as they feel part of a dynamic professional community.

  4. Strengthened internal communication

    Strong internal communication is essential to bring employer branding to life within the organization. It’s not enough to communicate externally — the internal message must be equally thoughtful and consistent.

    Many companies implement regular internal communication touchpoints with their teams: for example, internal newsletters highlighting recent successes and company news, welcoming new hires, or sharing ongoing projects.

    Highlighting employees in internal communications is a common practice: publicly celebrating team achievements, marking personal milestones (weddings, births), or recognizing retiring colleagues — all of these foster connection and team spirit. These positive messages help reinforce employee recognition and a sense of belonging.

    In parallel, it’s crucial to establish transparent and two-way communication channels — such as open Q&A meetings or digital suggestion boxes where employees can share ideas or voice concerns. Allowing employees to express themselves freely on projects and challenges helps build a climate of trust and authenticity.

    Sincere, open internal communication that aligns with the company’s values strengthens company culture and turns employees into true partners in employer branding. In turn, well-informed and engaged employees are more likely to reflect a positive image of their company externally — completing the virtuous circle of employer branding.

Social Media and Job Boards: At the Heart of Employer Branding Strategies

In the digital age, social media plays a central role in how candidates perceive a company. Younger generations, particularly Generation Z, are increasingly attentive to an employer’s online reputation — through reviews, comments, and published content.

As a result, employer branding efforts often focus on managing online reviews (Glassdoor, Indeed, LinkedIn), maintaining a presence on JobBoards, monitoring the company’s ranking among attractive employers, and overseeing all content shared on social media platforms.

More and more companies — including those in traditionally discreet sectors like luxury — are now heavily investing in audiovisual content designed for platforms such as TikTok or Instagram to showcase their professions, employees, and company culture in dynamic, human, and engaging formats.

Concrete examples of employer branding actions

Some companies manage to implement innovative strategies to develop their employer brand, such as Louis Vuitton.

The company has created a podcast on which episodes are broadcast in both French and English to highlight Louis Vuitton employees and their and their career paths within the famous house. This gives an overview of the possible careers within the group, the different professions and a closer look behind the scenes of the brand.

A second example is the audit firm Mazars, which has used new technologies to attract the best profiles. To do this, they have developed their Youtube channel on which they publish innovative content such as the web series “Vie de Mazars” where employees make fun of what happens at Mazars or with the use of virtual reality helmets to allow candidates to experience their first day of work in the company.

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