Building Employer Brand at a Manufacturing Brand

Default Author • Sep 24, 2021

Ball Corporation is a leading figure in the aluminum manufacturing industry: It manufactures 50% of aluminum cans in North America, along with household products and aerospace technology. However, it hasn’t released a new customer-facing product in 25 years.


That’s changing with the launch of its new, infinitely recyclable aluminum cup. This new product offers an alternative to the plastic cup and can be recycled as you would an aluminum can. The company’s hope is that consumers will reuse the cups when refilling their drinks, reducing plastic waste.


Leading employer brand through these historic changes is Heidi Myers, Director of Global Talent Acquisition at Ball. Myers and her team have embraced this spike in visibility as an opportunity to frame the brand as part of something bigger. This framing, Myers hopes, will attract the next generation of great talent to Ball.


Putting the Brand on the Map

Ball’s product launch coincides with another monumental event for its brand visibility: It’s just received the naming rights to a sports arena (formerly the Pepsi Center) in Denver, Colorado, where Ball is headquartered. The move is part of a partnership with Kroenke Sports & Entertainment and another outgrowth of Ball’s sustainability efforts.

Ball Arena’s presence in Denver is a huge step for brand awareness. Myers and her team see a tremendous opportunity to cultivate name recognition during home games and other events and sharpen their competitive edge as an employer.


A Spike in Visibility Leads to a Spike in Growth


What has all this headline-grabbing change done for Ball’s growth? A lot: The company is experiencing a 200% growth increase in North America alone and recently opened three new manufacturing plants. Ball’s team now encompasses roughly 18,000 employees around the globe.


This rapid expansion poses some exciting challenges for Myers and the talent acquisition team. New plant openings mean attracting talent to locations where Ball hasn’t recruited before. The secret to keeping pace with all this growth, according to Myers, is activation. “Don’t underestimate activation,” she says. “Any resources you can dedicate to it, do it.”


Myers recognizes the central role that employer brand and talent acquisition play in Ball’s future as an innovative, rewarding employer: “Talent acquisition is the backbone of an organization. Without good people, your organization is not going to grow.”


To follow Heidi Myers’s work in employer brand, connect with her on LinkedIn. For help gathering data and insights you can act on to improve your own company, get in touch.

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By Default Author 24 Oct, 2022
Long before COVID-19 made working from home the norm, this software company was experimenting with remote work and exploring its impact on employer brand. This unsung hero of the B2B technology space was powering some of the busiest and most visible brands of the early months of the pandemic, all while supporting a globally distributed workforce. Keeping a watchful eye on these experiments was Global Employment Brand Manager Price Peacock, whose team is responsible for showcasing that employee experience to the public. Embracing Remote Work Embracing the distributed team model benefits businesses in several ways. Chiefly: It allows hiring managers to recruit from a larger pool, and it makes you a more attractive employer to the staggering number of workers who now prefer telecommuting . The move to a distributed team helped VMware address its top talent challenge: standing out in the competitive local tech talent market in Palo Alto, California, where VMware’s headquarters sit. “From a talent perspective, we’re enabling our recruiters, sourcers, and hiring managers to look for people in areas not near VMware offices. That’s allowing us to remove some of those challenges that we historically faced and hire more diverse talent,” Peacock says. Prioritizing the “Why” Every year, Peacock’s employer brand team sits down for a “gut check.” They reevaluate their priorities and check their efforts against their larger relevance to the company. “It’s allowed us to be nimble, learn, and evolve our employer brand strategy,” Peacock says. VMware’s internal EVP reflects this commitment to employees’ development: Own your future. Its employer brand team also maintains a close relationship with the corporate brand team to ensure the message they promote internally stays aligned with the values VMware professes externally. Centering the Employee Perspective One of the most direct, meaningful ways to keep your employer brand messaging aligned with employee perspectives is to center those perspectives in your content. “Employee referrals today are our number one source of hire. Knowing that, we recognize the importance of our people’s perspectives and voices,” Peacock says. “We actively partner with the 33,000+ employees that work at VMware to create, share, and participate in the content and experiences we’re creating for prospective employees.” In foregrounding employee storytelling , Peacock is allowing VMware’s culture to speak for itself. “VMware’s brand is the sum of the emotions and attitudes that people have with us, whether it be our employees, our customers, or the broader community,” she says. To follow Price Peacock’s work in employer brand, connect with her on LinkedIn . For help identifying the values and culture you want to create in your company, get in touch .  Source
By Default Author 17 Oct, 2022
Aberdeen-based performance improvement specialists, STC INSISO, has acquired, for an undisclosed amount, the intellectual property and software of a revolutionary Artificial Intelligence (AI) product created through a successful joint venture partnership with Lloyds Register. COMET Signals, an AI driven tool that scans HSE data to deliver clear, immediate, and actionable insights, was co-developed by STC INSISO and Lloyds Register, the world’s premier trusted advisor to marine and offshore industry participants. STC INSISO are now sole owners of the product following the acquisition, which allows them to drive an ambitious product roadmap to build out a series of new features and improvements that will continue to push what’s possible in the AI Data Analytics space. Lloyds Register and STC INSISO will continue to work together to support clients in the oceans’ economy. COMET Signals is currently in commercial pilots with a number of major global companies including Coca Cola, Network Rail and McDermott. The COMET Signals technology is deployed across the organisations, to enable them to manage and analyse all their leading and lagging indicator data using one comprehensive platform to ensure they are maintaining the highest HSE standards. It analyses the natural language in large volumes of HSE data from observations, near misses, and incident reports to identify trends in Hazards and Topics, analyse Severity, and perhaps most importantly predict the presence of latent root causes with the potential to cause future incidents. Mark Rushton, CEO at STC INSISO, said “This is a truly exciting development in our business. Having full ownership and control of the COMET Signals product allows us to surge forward with our ambitious plans to further develop the tool. We will continue to diversify, growing early progress in the Rail, Construction, Marine and Retail industries with a further push into the Oil & Gas, Renewables, and Utility sectors. “We have a fantastic, long-standing relationship with Lloyds Register which we are immensely proud of. This latest development is absolutely not the end of this but quite the opposite. It is about new ways of working to ensure both businesses are creating most value add to the industries we support.” Following the acquisition, COMET Signals will imminently transition into STC INSISO’s flagship COMET Safety Performance System, a collective suite of tools to support businesses improve performance through root cause learning.  For more information go to https://www.cometanalysis.com/comet-signals Source
By Default Author 13 Oct, 2022
Big changes in the automotive technology space have inspired a renewed focus on attracting tech talent and workplace diversity for this company’s employer brand leadership. That focus is just one of the creative challenges Joanna Babiarz faces as Aptiv’s Global Employer Branding Director. Your Candidate Messaging Should Evolve with Your Industry Recent and rapid tech innovation is rendering certain skill groups obsolete while placing others in high demand. This is especially true of the automotive industry, which now courts very different talent pools than it did a decade ago, according to Babiarz. At first, Aptiv’s employer brand messaging wasn’t focused on tech. However, after clocking the industry shift toward being a tech-centric space, Babiarz and her team reshaped their candidate messaging to grab the attention of tech talent and position Aptiv as a competitive employer to this sought-after demographic. Today, roughly one-third of Aptiv’s engineers are software developers and ship over 40 billion lines of code each day. To Achieve Workplace Diversity, Start Early Refurbishing your employer brand is an ideal time to ensure your messaging reflects your values. During a recent rebrand, Babiarz and her team realized they had an opportunity to disrupt an automotive industry trend with Aptiv’s employer branding: its male-dominated workforce. Aptiv employs a diverse team of workers from many backgrounds, but like most other companies in the space, it still struggles to reach women and other demographics underrepresented in STEM. “We are trying to change this ratio. We are trying to show that this space is a fantastic opportunity for growth for anyone, regardless of gender or ethnicity,” Babiarz says. What Candidates Really Want Today’s candidates don’t just want to collect a paycheck; they want their work to hold meaning . Babiarz observed this when talking to Aptiv employees who’ve stayed at the company for five years or more, as well as those who returned after leaving for a different job. She noticed a theme among employee responses: “They have a purpose here. It’s not that they’re working on another software app; they’re helping save lives and mitigate the risks of accidents. They offer solutions that reduce emissions.” No matter the nature and scale of the shifts occurring in your industry, Babiarz’s advice to employer brand leaders is the same: Ask your employees about what needs to change. “It’s not always about the market trends or what the stakeholders expect from you,” she says. “You have to talk to your employees!”  To follow Joanna Babiarz’s work in employer brand, connect with her on LinkedIn . For help gathering data and insights you can act on to improve your company, get in touch . Source
By Default Author 06 Oct, 2022
Successful employer brand activation is all about thinking globally for this 352-year-old, progress-driven science and technology company. Merck Group has dedicated itself to furthering human progress through science and technology. It’s a lofty mission and one its team takes very seriously, particularly employer brand leader Chris Dinwiddy. You Value Curiosity Merck Group’s EVP, “Bring your curiosity to life,” carries two meanings for Dinwiddy. It invites employees to nurture their curiosity, but it also encourages employees to direct that curiosity toward improving life on earth. Curiosity isn’t just a trait of a great hire; it’s a skill that helps Merck Group make the world a better place. Curiosity also motivates the employer brand team’s investment in its ambassador network. With so many markets worldwide (including China, the US, Germany, and others), Dinwiddy has realized the importance of nurturing one-on-one relationships with regional heads of recruitment and demonstrating an interest in their unique region. You Stay Innovative When courting an in-demand demographic, filling a specific role type, or launching a campaign, the employer brand team relies on SAP SuccessFactors tools and custom landing pages. They keep a close on their Google Analytics and other sources of quantitative data, while also tracking more qualitative feedback (candidate comments like ”I didn’t know much about you before I applied” or “I’ve seen your brand around”) to measure success. The team is also trying out a new tool that’s been instrumental in gathering employee-generated content : an app called PathMotion, specifically designed to help candidates connect with employees. You Prioritize Humans “The recruitment industry’s drifted in the last few years away from corporate and polished , ” Dinwiddy observes. Now, candidates are responding more to honest, authentic, and candid messaging. For Dinwiddy, this human-centered and end-user-focused culture is key to what makes it a great place to work and such an easy employer to promote. In describing his experience at Merck Group, Dinwiddy offers the same kind of candidness he encourages in brands: “My job’s really special. I work for a brilliant company—and I’m not just saying that because they pay my salary!” To follow Chris Dinwiddy ’ s work in employer brand, connect with him on LinkedIn. For help gathering data and insight that you can act on to improve your company, get in touch . Source
By Default Author 18 Oct, 2021
The University of Aberdeen is delighted to offer an IChemE Approved online CPD Course, Biological Wastewater Treatment and Anaerobic Digestion: Theory, Design and Practice, which is aimed at professionals and PhD students working in the areas of biological wastewater treatment and anaerobic digestion. We take enrolments all year round and you can access all materials right from the start with up to 6 months to complete the course. Biological wastewater treatment is essential for the environment and for public health by avoiding the spread of diseases. Anaerobic digestion is a key technology in the handling of organic waste and in many renewable energy scenarios for a sustainable society. However, if not properly designed, operated and optimised, these processes may use large amounts of energy, occupy large areas of land and convert the organic matter in an inefficient way, at high economic and environmental cost for the society. This advanced course describes how to use concepts of chemical reaction stoichiometry and kinetics to design and optimise biological wastewater treatment and anaerobic digestion processes in order to maximise treatment efficiency while minimising the capital and operating costs. The course starts from the fundamentals of the biological processes relevant for wastewater treatment (e.g. kinetics and stoichiometry, COD balance, aeration and settling) and moves to their application to the design and optimisation of the following processes: activated sludge (carbon and carbon and nitrogen removal), anaerobic digestion, sequencing batch reactors, attached growth processes. What is covered: Fundamentals of biological wastewater treatment Kinetics and stoichiometry of biological reactions Step-by-step process of how to develop and solve the mass balances and design equations The main processes used in the industry are described and the corresponding design equations are developed The course includes numerical examples and design problems, solved by the course lecturer using Microsoft Excel. Why study online? Study in your own time – this CPD course does not require you to engage at specific times, giving you the freedom to choose when you study within the framework of your course. You choose where to study – at home, on the go, in the park… the choice is endless. And chosen by you. As long as you can access the internet, you can study with us – meaning you can get the same CPD certificate as our campus students without having to travel or commute. You will be supported – when you study online with us, you can expect a first-class support structure that means you are never alone in your studies. You can achieve your potential – studying with us will help you reach your goals. Studying online shows employers that you are self-motivated, can manage your own time and are dedicated to your own development. Don’t delay and register now for the chance to further your career Visit the course website HERE for more information: Email us: cpdservices@abdn.ac.uk Source
By Default Author 18 Oct, 2021
DIN has published method 38409-59 describing the determination of adsorbable organically bound halogens by combustion ion chromatography (CIC) in different water samples. AOX and AOF analysis according to the new standard is performed in two steps, preconcentration of the adsorbable organic halogens on activated carbon, followed by direct combustion and subsequent ion chromatographic (CIC) analysis. A free Metrohm application note describes the new method and its application for the analysis of AOF, which provides a fast and economical solution for non-targeted PFASs screening. Organohalogen compounds are widespread, persistent, and potentially toxic for humans and the environment. However, the techniques commonly used to monitor adsorbable organic halogens (AOX) can only determine the sum of organically bound chlorine, bromine, and iodine. These techniques do not provide individual results for AOCl, AOBr, and AOI, respectively, nor on the organofluorine (AOF) content. DIN method 38409-59 describes a validated method for comprehensive AOX analysis including AOF by CIC. Analysis by CIC allows the determination of the sum parameter as well as the individual concentrations of adsorbable organically bound fluorine, chlorine, bromine, and iodine in different waters.  Advantages of the new standard method: Selective determination of AOF, AOCl, AOBr, and AOI in waters AOF as fast non-targeted screening for PFASs Efficient and low-maintenance AOX determination Easy-to-use, robust, and efficient Further information on the application: Application Note AN-CIC-033 – Monitoring PFASs in water sources: Non-targeted adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) analysis by CIC White Paper WP-078 – Adsorbable organic fluorine (AOF) – a sum parameter for non-targeted screening of per- and polyfluorinated alkyl substances (PFASs) in waters Source
By Default Author 17 Oct, 2021
Everyone’s looking for tech talent, and the competition within this highly in-demand market is steep. This is the challenge Liz Gelb-O’Connor faces as ADP’s VP/Global Head of Employer Brand and Marketing. Here’s how Gelb-O’Connor and her team are tailoring their employer brand strategy to attract tech talent specifically. Building Global Awareness  As a payroll services provider, ADP pays one out of every six workers in the US and is almost a household name. However, outside of the US, it doesn’t have the same level of recognition as major US consumer brands. The employer brand team spent 10 months researching the international talent markets that yielded the most candidates and nurturing relationships with partner organizations in other countries. The result was an EVP localized for each country—a monumental effort that turned out to be well worth it, Gelb-O’Connor says. Nurture Future Talent ADP’s employer brand team also devotes energy to the very top of the tech talent funnel, those that aren’t looking for work right now but may be strong candidates in the future. ADP’s tech blog , a first of its kind for the company, keeps future talent abreast of industry conversations and news while showcasing the brand’s innovation and the thought leadership of its tech employees. The results of this tech-tailored approach to employer brand have been powerful. In the five years since Gelb-O’Connor began leading employer brand, ADP has won industry accolades, and earned a strong NPS score for its candidate experience . Cost of hire has dropped, and the candidate conversion rate for the tech career site is twice the rate of its main career site (despite launching during the hiring slowdown of May 2020). This rapid change and growth around tech is one of the things that makes Gelb-O’Connor so excited to lead employer brand at ADP. “It never gets old,” she says. “That’s been the most rewarding thing: seeing how far we’ve come.” To follow Liz Gelb-O’Connor’s work in employer brand, connect with her on LinkedIn . For help identifying the values and culture you want to create in your company, get in touch . Share this post: Source
By Default Author 16 Oct, 2021
Water industry professionals are invited to join a free-to-attend webinar , which will provide an introduction to the leading OCG system and how it enables water companies to accurately measure the knowledge and competency of their workforce. What is OCG? OCG is a competency assessment system from Watertrain (an RSK Group company) and provides the most comprehensive suite of assessment pathways to measure competence on offer anywhere in the UK water industry. OCG’s pathways provide a comprehensive competence structure across the entire function of the water industry – including the principal functions of the water cycle, water treatment, water network, wastewater network and wastewater treatment. In addition, OCG assesses competence in key industry support functions, such as ME and I and Operations Control. If you are interested in learning more, register your place on the webinar via the link below.  Webinar Details: Date: Monday 26 September 2022 Time: 12:00 PM Registration link: https://mailchi.mp/ebb175a9f31f/ocg-walkthrough-webinar Source
By Default Author 16 Oct, 2021
This pet care brand is building an exceptional culture while growing rapidly, thanks in part to its successful employer brand strategy. And though stay-at-home orders certainly played a role in Chewy’s success, it isn’t just the convenience of online shopping that’s driving its transformation. Its employer brand is helmed by Senior Employer Brand Manager Kara Hendrick, who has played a crucial role in helping Chewy keep pace with a season of rapid growth. Internal Champions The employer brand function at Chewy grew out of the company’s goal to raise awareness of the growing number of diverse roles it needed to fill. Chewy’s HR department was one of its first champions, which kickstarted company-wide enthusiastic support for Hendrick’s work. Hendrick knows that finding these internal champions is key to employer brand success, and she prioritizes building relationships with stakeholders in PR, talent management, branding, and social. These relationships are especially beneficial for employer brand projects with vast scope but limited resources; they help Hendrick avoid getting too “in the weeds.” Culture Investment This attention to the personal pervades Chewy’s culture beyond its customer service strategy. Team members aren’t “employees” but “Chewtopians,” and Chewy’s operating principles include statements like “Act like an owner.” When lockdown restrictions forced Chewy’s corporate offices and customer service centers into home offices, the company’s talent management and employee experience teams met with its CHRO and CEO to revisit and recommit to its values.  No One-Size-Fits-All Strategy Chewy recruits for corporate customer service, tech, and fulfillment center roles, all while maintaining a unified message and navigating each talent segment’s unique challenges. Hiring for a diverse array of roles, Hendrick has learned, demands diverse strategies. “What attracts a software engineer in Boston isn’t the same as what attracts an operations manager in Dayton, Ohio,” she observes. Designing an employer brand strategy that will be successful for all these markets demands careful listening. This fact hit home in Hendrick’s early days at Chewy when she met with the Head of Fulfillment Center Recruiting. After listening to Hendrick present her grand plans for targeting fulfillment center candidates, he asked, “Have you ever visited a Chewy fulfillment center?” Hendrick admitted she hadn’t yet. But after her first visit, “It all made sense.” To follow Kara Hendrick’s work in employer brand, connect with her on LinkedIn . For help gathering the right data and developing strategies to make real change at your company, get in touch . Share this post: Source
By Default Author 15 Oct, 2021
This tech company with French roots has a unique way of framing its EVP—or, as Talend says, its JNSQ, or “je ne sais quoi.”“ Talend was on a mission to put words to what were necessarily undefinable qualities of its brand and culture. What its people marketing team, led by Global People Marketing Manager Jonathan Hehir, uncovered was the importance of culture, diversity, and company-wide EVP stewardship. Why Culture Is Key “It’s tough for candidates to truly understand what their next business looks like and the type of culture they’re interested in ,” Hehir says. “I can understand why candidates when they’re looking at their job search, are behaving more like consumers. Everyone’s edging for that little bit of attention.” According to Hehir, the people of Talend are close collaborators and united by love for their field. To succeed, Hehir’s team has to demonstrate that supportive culture to the rest of the tech world. What Makes a Unique Workplace Like many companies, the pandemic spurred the company to revisit its commitment to diversity and its employer brand. Led by its new CEO Christal Bemont, Talend sought out new ways to own its core values (agility, integrity, passion, and team spirit) and reexamined its “je ne sais quoi” (or JNSQ, as the team says). Among the many positive results of this self-reflection was a recommitment to making Talend an inclusive workplace : “An environment where people feel safe and feel a sense of belonging; a place where they can be themselves, even if they may not be visiting offices or their coworkers,” in Hehir’s words. Public reception was positive as well. According to Hehir, “People enjoyed the idea that we were celebrating people’s differences from the outset.” Revisit Your Culture’s Roots This sense of shared stewardship of the EVP, or JNSQ, has had a major impact on the success of Talend’s employer brand activation efforts. “Remember where your culture stems from,” Hehir advises fellow employer brand leaders. Remembering the people behind the brand, he says, is what gets him excited to tell Talend’s story—and welcome new faces into it. To follow Jonathan Hehir’s work in employer brand, connect with him on LinkedIn . For help with your own EVP, get in touch . We help you identify the values and culture you want to create in your company. Share this post: Source
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