Article: Here’s what you need to do to make social referrals work

A Brand Reachout InitiativeEmployer Branding

Here’s what you need to do to make social referrals work

When existing employees talk about a companys values, mission, and vision, it is far more likely to attract their peer than just brand voice.
Here’s what you need to do to make social referrals work

82% of employers rated employee referrals above all other sources for generating the best return on investment, according to one survey.  

When it comes to attracting and sourcing top talent, employee referrals has been a popular channel. But now, with the rise of HR technology and social talent platforms, we are seeing the rise of “social referring”. Existing employees are using the LinkedIn and Facebook to propagate their ‘Employer Value Proposition’ through online interactions such as shares, likes, comments etc., Social referring thus relies heavily on employees acting as the company’s brand ambassadors. 

Referral machines are built on the principle that high achievers know other high achievers. When employees share their trusted contacts for any openings with the organization, the recruiting reach of the company grows exponentially – which means companies can wait for the right talent to come to them. Each time an employee talks about the company, job opportunities and culture, it boosts the employer brand in a way that is unmatched by any traditional employer branding spend. 

Here are four steps that companies need to follow to leverage their social referrals:

  1. Maintain online communication

    For referrals to be successful, employees and alumni must be aware of existing openings. Companies often struggle with the issue of how to keep open jobs on the referral radar of the employees. They employ a number of methods including mailers, company social networks and team meetings to make employees aware of available jobs.

    Advanced social recruiting solutions not only connect the workforce, they also mine employees’ contacts for potential talent, and proactively suggest connections to drive referrals. More companies are also using external social media tools like Twitter and Facebook to make it easy for employees to share job openings with their own social networks.

  2. Motivate participation

    Companies need to reflect on the question “how do you make employees care” in order for a referral program to be truly successful. A referral program that sends openings matched to an employee’s background and network will be more successful than one that just distributes all vacancies to everybody. But targeting job-opening announcements without a solution to simplify the process can be hugely labor-intensive. Rewarding employees for referrals is essential. Referral solutions like Oracle’s Taleo social sourcing service use data and analytics that are capable of tracking employee bonus eligibility throughout the process. Even when job openings go viral, it will automatically calculate which employees are entitled to which bonuses 

  3. Make it easy and rewarding

    Even after publishing job openings on the corporate career websites, providing generous referral bonuses, and sending out weekly messages, referral rates may remain low if the process is too time-consuming. It is therefore important for companies to focus on “how to eliminate effort?”

    Referral platforms should focus on allowing employees and alumni to participate at the click of a button thereby dramatically increasing participation levels. A few companies are also experimenting with referral platforms that use the gamification technology to make the referral processes more engaging and interactive with the goal of making the process more fun for employees.

Reinforce your employment brand

When companies explore the option of using external referral solutions, they need to ensure that there is brand consistency throughout the process. Be it communications in the form of branded emails or directing applicants to the corporate career page, when there is brand consistency throughout the application process, it eases the candidate experience. Advanced referral platforms such as the Oracle Social Sourcing tool automatically take into account brand consistency.

In an age when recruiters are facing growing challenges to find the right talent to suit the needs of the organization, they are increasingly dependent on technology-based solutions to take the full advantage of employee and alumni social networks. Identifying the right technology tool with the goal of addressing the prevailing gaps in branding issues, motivating and rewarding employees at the right time and creating the right platform to make the referral process easy will go a long way in boosting social referrals.

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Topics: Employer Branding, #Lets Talk Talent APAC

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