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The role of social media in building an employer brand:Finland’s most attractive employers Poola Isomäki Department of Entrepreneurship Hanken School of Economics Helsinki 2016

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Page 1: Thesis_Poola Isomäki

The role of social media in building an employer brand:Finland’s most attractive employers

Poola Isomäki

Department of Entrepreneurship

Hanken School of Economics

Helsinki

2016

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HANKEN SCHOOL OF ECONOMICS

Department of:

Entrepreneurship

Type of work: Thesis

Author and Student number:

Poola Isomäki s142160

Date:

6.3.2016

Title of thesis:

The role of social media in building an employer brand: Finland’s most attractive

employers

Abstract: This thesis is about employer branding in social media. Employer branding practices have become more popular in the real world, but academic research has been very limited on the topic with a few articles in the marketing literature until recent. (Backhaus & Tikoo 2004; Fisher et al.2014; Bakanauskienè et al. 2015.) The following is a case study (8 case companies that according to Universum’s ranking are considered to be ideal employers), more specifically their social media presences. The research is done with the help of these research question:

• How are companies using the new forms of communication channels (social media) in building their brand and employer reputation?

• What kind of content do they publish in their social media channels? What kind of posts affect positively on their employer brand and reputation as an employer?

• How are they trying to appeal to new talent?

The used method is qualitative content analysis, and with the help of it a review was conducted by analysing the companies’ web sites and social media profiles.

The results give a versatile glimpse over how companies from different industries utilise the possibilities provided by the social media regarding their employer brand and reputation.

Keywords: Employer Branding, Employer Reputation, Generation Y, Ideal

Employer, Universum, Current and Potential Employees, Case Study, Qualitative

Content Analysis

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CONTENTS

1 INTRODUCTION....................................................................................... 1

1.1 Purpose ................................................................................................................ 3

1.2 Research questions .............................................................................................. 3

1.3 Demarcations ...................................................................................................... 4

1.4 The Structure of this Research ............................................................................ 4

2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK ............................................................... 6

2.1 Concepts .............................................................................................................. 6

2.1.1 Employer Branding as a Concept ................................................................ 6

2.1.2 Employer Attractiveness ........................................................................ 7

2.1.3 Generation Y .......................................................................................... 8

2.1.3.1 The Eight Norms of Generation Y .......................................... 8

2.1.3.2 Generations X and Z ................................................................ 9

2.2 Social Media, Use and Strategy in Companies .................................................... 9

2.2.1 The use of social media in companies ................................................... 11

2.2.2 Dimensions of Social Media .................................................................. 12

2.3 Employer Branding ........................................................................................... 14

2.3.1 Employer Branding as a Process ........................................................... 16

2.3.2 The strength of an Employer Brand ..................................................... 17

2.3.3 Instrumental and symbolic dimension ................................................. 17

2.3.4 The Future of Employer Branding ........................................................ 19

2.4 Employer Reputation ....................................................................................... 20

2.4.1 Encounters ............................................................................................24

2.4.2 The Dimensions of a Reputation ..........................................................26

2.4.3 Evaluating and Measuring Employer Reputation ................................ 27

3 METHOLOGY AND DATA ..................................................................... 29

3.1 Qualitative method and technique ....................................................................29

3.2 The Trustworthiness of this Research and Limitations .................................... 32

3.3 Data ................................................................................................................... 34

3.3.1 Universum ............................................................................................. 34

3.3.2 Background ........................................................................................... 35

3.3.3 Introduction to the eight companies..................................................... 36

3.3.3.1 KONE ..................................................................................... 36

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3.3.3.2 Nordea .................................................................................... 37

3.3.3.3 Fazer ....................................................................................... 37

3.3.3.4 Google ................................................................................... 38

3.3.3.5 Microsoft ............................................................................... 38

3.3.3.6 Supercell ................................................................................ 39

3.3.3.7 ABB ........................................................................................ 39

3.3.3.8 The Finnish Environment Institute - Suomen ympäristökeskus SYKE ......................................................... 40

3.3.3.9 Data Conclusion and the case companies’ social media presence ................................................................................ 40

3.3.4 Data collection ...................................................................................... 41

4 ANALYSIS ............................................................................................... 43

4.1 Overview of the social media presences ............................................................ 43

4.2 How is social media used in employer branding and reputation? .................... 45

4.2.1 Companies using social media channels in building their brand and reputation as an employer ................................................................... 46

4.2.2 The social media content that has a(n) (positive) impact on the employer brand and reputation ........................................................... 48

4.2.2.1 Industry of Business .............................................................. 52

4.2.2.2 Industry of IT ......................................................................... 53

4.2.2.3 Industry of Engineering ......................................................... 55

4.3 Targeted marketing towards new talents .......................................................... 56

4.3.1 Industry of Business.............................................................................. 56

4.3.2 Industry of IT ........................................................................................58

4.3.3 Industry of Engineering ....................................................................... 60

4.4 General thoughts about the use of different social media channels in employer branding ............................................................................................................ 63

5 DISCUSSION .......................................................................................... 66

5.1 Conclusions and Remarks ................................................................................ 68

6 SVENSK SAMMANFATTNING .............................................................. 71

6.1 Introduktion till ämnet ..................................................................................... 71

6.2 Motivering av studien och en syftesformulering............................................... 72

6.3 Presentation av tidigare forskning, val av metoder och material ..................... 73

6.4 Resultatredovisning och konkluderande avslutningen .................................... 74

REFERENCES ............................................................................................ 79

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TABLES

Table 1. The impact of social media on employer branding and HR in the years of 2013-2018……………………………………………………………………………………….18

Table 2. The social media presence of the case companies……………………………………40

FIGURES

Figure 1. The dimensions of social media …………………………………………………………….12

Figure 2. The four elements of employer reputation……………………………………………..20

Figure 3. The making of reputation……………………………………………………………………..24

Figure 4. The six dimensions of reputation in Finland…………………………………………..26

PICTURES

Picture 1. A Twiit from Microsoft Women.............................................................................48

Picture 2. Supercell’s cover picture on Facebook………………………………………………………………………49

Picture 3. A LinkedIN post from Google………………………………………………………………..50

Picture 4. Baab the Lamb……………………………………………………………………………………..50

Picture 5. Gayglers in California……………………………………………………………………………53

Picture 6. Nordea’s Graduate Program…………………………………………………………………..56

Picture 7. Google scholarships………………………………………………………………………………58

Picture 8. Google’s post for inters………………………………………………………………………….58

Picture 9. ABB Talent Trainee Program…………………………………………………………………60

Picture 10. ABB on Instagram……………………………………………………………………………….60

Picture 11. ABB got visitors……………………………………………………………………………………61

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1 INTRODUCTION

Today, brands are considered to be a company’s most valuable asset, and this has

led to brand management being a key activity in many firms. In the past,

companies have focused their branding efforts towards product development but

nowadays it can also be used in the area of human resource management. The

process of applying the branding principles to human resource management is

called employer branding. Companies are using employer branding more and

more to attract talents and to make sure the existing employees are engaged

within the organizational culture and the strategy of the company. (Sullivan

2004.) Today, many companies have developed an official employer brand or are

interested in developing such a program (Conference Board 2001).

Employer brand image has become highly important in today’s job search. This

is mainly the result of employees’ attitudes towards work evolving (Herman &

Gioia 2011). According to Argenti (2009), employees look for more extensive

knowledge and information about the company he or she works or is going to

work for. A job has become more of a career and it now holds more value for the

individual than just a mean to pay the rent. Especially to the new generation

stepping to the working life: Generation Y (Tapscott 2010). As a result, being a

good employer is not enough anymore. Instead, in order to retain current

employees and attract new ones a company needs to be seen as a good employer

as well. (Hepburn 2005.) Many attempts have been used when companies have

tried to face the challenges of having a good employer brand, such as e-

recruitment practices (Tong 2009) and reputation management (Hepburn

2005).

It has been studied that stakeholders will only have positive thoughts about a firm

if it has shown similar positive actions towards them (Lewis 2001). This exchange

is especially true when the stakeholder groups are customers or employees

(Davies et al. 2003). At the same time, a new board-level concern has risen:

managing how employees – current and potential – see the company as an

employer (Hepburn 2005). This highlights the importance of employer

reputation. Organizations compete on getting on different Best Employer –

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ranking lists – such as Great Place to Work, Talentum, and Universum – because

they are a powerful tool in employer brand building.

According to Mosley (2014) measurements of the employer branding results are

done at least somehow only in 25 % of all organizations. This is partly due to the

fact that human resource department collects the data from numerous

independent sources which makes it complex and there might not be enough

skills to analyze the data. The most typical meters are employer branding surveys

made by outsiders – as mentioned previously.

Social media might have solutions to some of the challenges in reputation

management and it is due to the way it operates. Social media is referred “as a

medium with potential for real-time interaction, dialogue, spontaneity, reduced

anonymity, a sense of propinquity, short response times and the ability to time

shift” (Kent 2010, 645). Second definition is by Henderson and Bowley (2010,

237) who see social media as “online tool that emphasises participation,

connectivity, user-generation, information sharing and collaboration”.

Today, companies appear to be using multiple resources on employer branding

campaigns. It can be interpreted that they find value in them. According to

reports on organizations who do employer branding, effective employer branding

leads to many positive outcomes: competitive advantages, helps employees

internalize company values, and assist in employee retention (Conference Board

2001). Additionally, according to a national recruitment survey (Duunitori 2015)

38 % of the respondents say that a good employer brand is vital to a successful

recruitment and 49 % has partly the same opinion. This means that 87 % of the

respondents believe that an employer brand is important for recruitments.

Companies have understood this, and are willing to invest in it.

Organization creates an employee value proposition (EVP) that is connected to

the employer brand (Backhaus & Tikoo 2004). Employee value proposition

means the value that the company offers to its employees. This EVP defines who

the organization wishes to be seen. It lists the key definitions that are wanted to

be associated with the organization as an employer. Efficient value propositions

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are clear and easy to understand. Basically EVP is the translation of the

company’s values into employee context; it should clarify the company’s values

to the employee and highlight those features of the brand’s ideology, culture, and

future visions that are relevant to tempt new talents and keep the current ones in

the organization. (Mosley 2014.)

Nowadays employer branding practices have become more popular in the real

world, but only just a decade ago academic research was very limited on the topic

with a few articles in the marketing literature (Backhaus & Tikoo 2004). Within

today’s academic research this theme is a little more researched (e.g.

Bakanauskienè et al. 2015; Fisher et al. 2014; Aggerholm Kryger, Esman

Andersen, & Thomsen 2011) but still the academic community comes a little

behind. The theoretical background of employer branding stems from consumer

and corporate branding, but the main target groups are current and potential

employees (Moroko & Uncles 2008). Within this there lays a gap that should be

researched better. This raises interesting questions for management scholars:

which theories can help us understand employer branding and how should

employer branding be investigated and validated as an appropriate practice for

human resource management? (Backhaus & Tikoo 2004.)

1.1 Purpose

The purpose of this thesis is to research companies that are considered to be good

employers and the ways these companies portray their employer brands and

reputations through social media, how they can be interpreted, and, specifically,

how these companies address the new talents of Generation Y.

1.2 Research questions

The main focus of this research is to look into eight companies’ employer brand,

their employer reputation, to find out how they use social media in constructing

it. That is why I believe that these three research questions help in understanding

that phenomena.

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How are companies using the new forms of communication channels

(social media) in building their brand and employer reputation?

What kind of content do they publish in their social media channels? What

kind of posts affect positively on their employer brand and reputation as

an employer?

How are they trying to appeal to new talent?

The Universum’s ranking is based on the answers of university students, and in

this thesis it is used as a source of companies with good employer brands in

Finland. That is why it is chosen to specifically look into their way of “marketing”

themselves to young talents (from Generation Y). This is also in the interest of

aTalent Recruiting (more of this in 3.3.2).

1.3 Demarcations

Even though the concepts of generations Y and Z are quite similar, this thesis

addresses only the ideas and thoughts of Generation Y. Recruitments are usually

connected to employer branding but in this thesis the literature of recruitments

is not handled and it will not be a part of the theoretical framework. Different job

advertisements are not a part of the data and only the introduction words

connected to open positions that are posted in different social media platforms

will be analysed. This thesis does research only on three major social media

channels: Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter. This is because it is important that

all or at least majority of the case companies are represented in all of the chosen

social media channels.

1.4 The Structure of this Research

The research starts with an introduction to the whole theme and presents the

research problem and research questions. After that, in chapter 2, the theoretical

framework is presented with the main focus on social media, employer branding,

and employer reputation. In chapter 3 the chosen methods and data are opened

and explained thoroughly. Chapters 4 and 5 handle the analysis, results,

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conclusions, and remarks of this thesis. The Swedish summary is before

references.

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2 THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK

2.1 Concepts

In this first sub-chapter the most important concepts are explained and opened.

They help with understanding the whole phenomena better. Some other

concepts, with lesser importance to the thesis’ subject, are opened in the main

theoretical text as they appear.

2.1.1 Employer Branding as a Concept

Kotler (1997, 443) defines the concept of brand as “a name, term, sign, symbol,

or design, or combination of them which is intended to identify the goods and

services of one seller or group of sellers and to differentiate them from those of

competitors”. The use of branding has changed over the years; it was originally

used to differentiate tangible products but now it is used to differentiate people,

places, and companies (Peters 1999).

The term employer branding suggests distinguishing a company’s attributes as

an employer from its competitors. The concept highlights the uniqueness of what

a company can offer as an employer. Ambler and Barrow (1996) define the

concept in benefits; functional, economic, and psychological aspects. A deeper

description of these can be found from 2.3. In a likewise way the Conference

Board (2001) suggests that “the employer brand establishes the identity of the

firm as an employer. It encompasses the firm’s value system, policies and

behavio[u]rs toward the objectives of attracting, motivating, and retaining the

firm’s current and potential employees”.

Both of these definitions point out that employer branding implies promotion,

both in-house and outside the company, which provides a clear view of what

differentiates a company and makes it desirable as an employer (Backhaus &

Tikoo 2004).

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2.1.2 Employer Attractiveness

Employer attractiveness is closely related to the concept of employer branding.

Employer attractiveness can be defined as benefits which the potential employees

believe will be received if they get hired to a certain organization (Berthon, Ewing,

& Hah 2005). The higher the potential employees see the employer

attractiveness, the more the position has brand capital (Berthon et al. 2005;

Wilden, Gudergan, & Lings 2010).

It is important to understand so called attractiveness factors if a company is seen

as an attractive employer to potential and current employees (Berthon, Ewing, &

Hah 2005). For instance, Berthon with his fellow researchers (2005) have created

a 32-part EmpAt-scale, and that can be used as a tool in recognizing these factors

and valuating the attractiveness of an employer.

Potential employees evaluate the employer attractiveness through different work

place and task related features (Wilden et al. 2010). These kinds of features are

listed e.g. in the above-mentioned scale. Certain features are easier to evaluate,

such as the salary, where as some features – say working atmosphere – is harder

to predict in beforehand (Wilden et al. 2010).

Evaluating the employer attractiveness causes some information seeking related

costs to the job seekers. If the potential job seekers need to use a lot of resources

to get information about the company they might feel that there are too many

risks and the employer is seen less attractive. But if the information found about

the employer is found promising is the felt risk smaller. At the same time, the

expected quality of the job and in that way the attractiveness are seen as much

bigger. (Wilden et al. 2010.)

According to the framework, how attractive as an employer potential employees

see the company depends on the consistency of the employer image, clarity,

believability of the messages transmitting the employer brand, and on the

investments done to support the employer branding. Other factors also, such as

previous work experience and the company’s field, location, and size, have an

impact on the felt employer brand attractiveness. (Wilden et al. 2010.)

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2.1.3 Generation Y

The term ‘Generation Y’ is usually used when describing a generation born in

Europe and in the USA approximately between the years 1977 to 2000 who are

believed to be democratic and liberal. This generation is named after a previous

generation, Generation X, named by Douglas Coupland in his novel Generation

X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture (1991). This generation questions the values

of the previous generation, is more open to diversity, and has grown together with

the development of technology. Actually, the advocates do most of their

communicating through the international network. (Shroer 2013.) This is why the

generation has been called also the Internet generation and Diginatives (Tapscott

2010; Suutarinen 2011). Generation Y is strongly family and individual oriented.

They are flexible and demand that from others as well. (Shroer 2013.) The

children of generation Y have been encouraged to express themselves, to make an

impact, and to network. These skills are used later also in the working life. They

expect this from others as well. (Suutarinen 2011.)

Globally, the Generation Y started to enter the working life in the 21st century

(Tienari 2010; Suutarinen 2011) and it has been forecasted that until 2020 the

Generation Y makes up 50 % of world’s work force (Raunio 2011). This is why it

is important to realize what this generation looks from an employer, and to do

research how companies try to brand themselves to attract them.

2.1.3.1 The Eight Norms of Generation Y

Don Tapscott, an assistant professor in leadership and management from the

University of Toronto, has found in his researches eight “norms”, with what he

means Generation Y’s typical attitude and behavior related features that

differentiate this generation from the previous and other generations represented

by their parents. These norms are freedom, modifying, researching, ethicalness,

collaboration, entertainment, speed, and innovativeness. They value freedom;

freedom to be whomever they want to be and freedom of choice. They want to

modify everything – their job as well. They learn to question and check everything

they see and hear. Honesty, sincerity, foresightness, openness, and holding on to

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commitments are on the top of the list they value. They are excellent in working

in groups. Speed is something they enjoy, same as new thoughts. (Tapscott 2010.)

2.1.3.2 Generations X and Z

The generation born approximately in 1965–1982 are called Generation X

(Tulgan 1997). The concept first came to be in Douglas Coupland’s novel called

Generation X. The Generation Xs are usually described as independent and

technology-oriented. They define success with their own terms and they want to

participate into decision making (when it comes to their own job). The members

of this generation are not interested in working for the organization’s common

good. (Kinnaird 2002.) They believe that their ideas and abilities need to be

evaluated according to their accomplishments.

The so called “new generation” (born after 1990) – Generation Z – is soon starting

their careers. According to Tapscott (2010), they want freedom with everything

they do and they love solutions and tailoring. They question, look for honesty and

openness from companies and want entertainment to their lives. The members of

Generation Z want their work to be challenging but at the same time they want it

to be fun, they want to enjoy the time they spend at the work place. (Tapscott

2010.) This generation resembles quite much the previous generation, Y.

2.2 Social Media, Use and Strategy in Companies

Social media utilizes mobile and web based technologies to create interactive

platforms through which individuals and communities can share, produce, and

modify user-generated content and discuss about it. The concept of social media

contains multiple sub-concepts: social network sites, blogs, collaborative

projects, content communities, and virtual game worlds. (Bondarouk et al. 2013.)

Chaffey (2011, 718) defines social media as “a category of media focusing on

participation and peer-to-peer communication between individuals with sites

providing the capability to develop user-generated content (UGC) and to

exchange messages and comments between different users”.

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At the moment, pages of social media are versatile, and they differ from each

other with their target group and the activities they offer. Some pages are targeted

to big masses, like Facebook. On the other hand, other pages are more focused on

professional networks, like LinkedIn. Some pages are also focused on media

sharing, like YouTube and Flickr. After a slow start in the 1990’s web-logs (or

blogs) have transformed into popular because they are easy to create and keep.

The writers of blogs vary from private persons to professionals and to public

figures. (Kietzmann et al.2011.)

In this study, the focus is on social network sites which are defined as following:

”Web-based services that allow individuals to (1) construct a public or semi-

public profile within a bounded system, (2) articulate a list of other users with

whom they share a connection, and (3) view and traverse their list of connections

and those made by others within the system” (Ellison 2008). To avoid confusion,

the terms ‘social network sites’ and ‘social media’ are used as synonyms. The

definition above applies for the both of them.

When talking about the users of social media, Generation Y builds an interesting

segment of users both to academics and to practitioners (Bissola & Imperatori

2013). Manroop and Richardson (2013) have made a discovery based on a lot of

research that, apart from their age, only the use of social media characterizes the

Generation Y most explicitly.

However, this special attribute has been noted and extensively researched only

from a personal life point of view: how these Generation Y users socialize, receive

information, and entertain themselves etc. It was only recently that it was

discovered that social media have a significant impact on the way this generation

notices brands and companies; this led to a great rise in interest that companies

currently express for this topic. (Fischer et al. 2014).

Employer branding has received growing attention in the past years, but still it

can be called a rather new and underdeveloped research area (Bondarouk et al.

2013). Bondarouk with his colleagues (2013) define employer branding as “a

long-term strategy of any given company, aimed at both building a unique and

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desirable employer identity and managing the perceptions of prospective and

current employees, in order to gain competitive advantage”, and it is seen as a

part of corporate branding, which means a company’s general strategy of

branding.

The main reason for a firm to care about its employer brand image is to be

tempting to competent, potential, and talented current and/or future employees

to be able to attract and retain those (Sivertzen et al. 2013). Hence, recruiting is

considered to be of uttermost priority for employer brand image (Sivertzen et al.

2013).

Companies customarily use multiple channels of marketing when they work with

their recruitment strategies: word-of-mouth, offline periodical publications and

the Internet (Sivertzen et al. 2013). During the upcoming years, the role of social

media in employer branding strategies is envisioned to grow notably, especially

with the process of recruitments (Fischer et al. 2014).

2.2.1 The use of social media in companies

Even though it is clear that there lies a lot of power within social media, many

leaders are reluctant or incapable of creating strategies and allocating resources

to utilize social media effectively (Kietzmann et al. 2011). Because of this

companies ignore regularly or manage poorly the possibilities and threats

brought to their attention by creative consumers (Berthon et al. 2007). One

reason for this incompetentness is the lack of understanding of social media and

ignorance on what kind of forms it can take (Kaplan & Haenlein 2010).

Even though social media offers great potential advantages when used as a part

of the employer image strategy, it and its practical meaning on this has not

received a lot of attention from the academic community (Sivertzen et al. 2013).

Although, most of today’s marketing plans include elements of Facebook, Twitter,

and YouTube, very few marketers work systematically to understand and manage

the company’s social media strategy. At the same time, they take a risk when

going after the newest application and treating different elements as different

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platforms instead of trying to understand the basics. The ecosystem of social

media enables the marketer’s thoughts to be directed to the common strategy and

not the tactics. Working with this ecosystem enables the marketers to wonder

who are part of the target group, on what traditional or social platform do these

target groups live, what kind of marketing content does the company want to

publish, and how do the marketers feed this information through the ecosystem.

(Hanna, Rohm, & Crittenden 2011.)

With the rise of social media it seems like the organized communication is

democratized. Individuals and communities have taken over the personnel

working with marketing and PR, and they produce, share, and consume blogs,

twiits, Facebook posts, movies, photos, and alike. Communication about different

brands happens with or without the permission of the company in question. This

means that companies need to decide if they will take social media seriously and

take part in that kind of communication or keep ignoring it. Both of these have

massive consequences. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

2.2.2 Dimensions of Social Media

Kietzmann and his fellow researchers (2011) describe the seven dimensions of

social media applications (Figure 1.): identity, conversations, sharing, presence,

relationships, reputation, and groups. The dimensions demonstrate the features

of social media that all of them or just part of them can appear in each social

media application. With analyzing these dimension companies can monitor and

understand the procedures and effects of social media, and based on these create

a working strategy to use them. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

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Figure 1. The dimensions of social media (retold from Kietzmann et al. 2011).

Identity is very visible on social media. For an individual this means most

commonly sharing large amounts of personal data in public. Companies need to

take into consideration how much sharing of information they enable taking also

the information security risks into account. This all needs to be done well while

choosing the channels of social media. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.) The relationships

define how many options to connect with other users the application creates

(Kietzmann et al. 2011). According to the meaning of the word ‘social’

relationships work as an essential element on social media, because without them

it would all be about structures of codes (Knight & Cook 2013).

Reputation in the context of social media means the amount of content shared by

a user(s) that is visible to other users. Companies can measure their reputation

with objective meters based on the number of followers or viewing times or based

on collected opinions, for instance. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

Conversations means the amount of opportunities that social media provides to

communicate between the users. Some services are created exactly for this

purpose only, the conversations between users. For companies the freedom of

speech can be both positive and negative: on the other hand it creates a possibility

Identity

Presence

Relationships

Reputation

Groups

Conversations

Sharingn

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to communicate with clients but the bad feedbacks travel quickly on the social

media. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

Sharing means the amount of sharing and receiving the particular social media

channel enables. To reach the wanted target group companies should think about

what the company and its clients have in common, and what kind of content these

target groups would be interested in receiving. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

Presence means the feature of social media that shows where the users are and

how much it is relevant to know where the users are in the interest of the feature

of social media. Simplified, this can mean that a user appears to be ‘online’ when

the users is present. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

Forming groups is typical to many social media channels. Groups can be formed,

for instance, based on common interests, and this can be one way a company tries

to reach its target group. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

2.3 Employer Branding

Ambler and Barrow (1996) were one of the firsts in creating the base for the

concept of employer branding. They defined it as follows: a combination of

functional, economical, and psychological employment-related benefits that can

be connected to the employer. Functional benefits can be advancing the

development and/or otherwise useful activities. Economic benefits can be ether

tangible or monetary benefits. Psychological benefits, on the other hand, are

emotions, such as feeling of social cohesion or meaningfulness. (Ambler & Barrow

1996.)

The same concepts are used in employer branding as well as in product branding.

For instance, according to Ambler and Barrow (1996) the employer brand has a

personality and it can be positioned in the same way as product brands. The

context is different, though, because employer branding is related to human

resources.

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According to Tybout and Calkins (2005) positioning answers to questions (1)

what is/what are the brand’s target group(s)? (2) What is the aim these target

groups can receive with the help of the brand? And (3) Why to choose one brand

over the others, especially when the aims are possibly the same? In other words,

the target group needs to know what the specific brand is, what is its meaning,

what does it do, and what is the gain from it, also in the long hall (Dahlèn et al.

2010). When positioning is applied to employer branding it is important to find

answers to these questions also then when product brands and employer brands

are similar in this way.

What comes to the humane side of the brand, the so called personalities, has

Aaker (1997) developed five personality types, or characters, and they are

competence, excitement, ruggedness, sincerity, and sophistication. According to

Dahlèn and his colleagues (2010) these brand personalities form a good starting

point for marketing communication because with the help of these describing a

brand and understanding its position amongst other competing brands is easy.

Rampl and Kenning (2014) studied how these five personalities affect the

jobseekers’ trust and liking towards the employer brand and how attractive the

employer brand was. In the research students were asked to evaluate some

consulting companies’ employer brands.

According to the findings, companies, who wished for a head start in the

competition for the best applicants should pay attention to their employer brand’s

characteristics by finding out which traits especially affect positively the

jobseekers’ formation of trust and liking (Rampl & Kenning 2014).

Edwards (2009) says that in employer branding the branded “product” is a

unique work experience that is individual with every employer. The assumption

is, that when a company clarifies and manages this work experience, the end

result is the formed (positive or negative) value and impact for the target group.

In this case, the targets for employer branding are, among other things, current

and potential employees but also on some level the company’s other (outside)

stakeholders.

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2.3.1 Employer Branding as a Process

According to Backhaus and Tikoo (2004), employer branding is a three-faced

process:

1. Value proposition

Information about the culture of the company, leading styles, and the attributes

of current employees are told through the employer brand. A description of what

the company can offer to its employees belongs to value proposition as well.

2. External marketing

The value proposition of an employer brand is communicated to recruitment

partners, among others, so that they can reach the right target group. Building a

unique image helps so that the potential job applicants can imagine themselves

working in the company. A unique image also strengthens the commitment of the

employees. On the other hand, a distinguished brand enables getting the distinct

human capital to the company.

3. Internal marketing

A company must respect the promises given to the employees before the

recruitments because these promises become a part of the office culture. Through

internal marketing the company builds a staff to itself that others have difficulties

in copying – a staff that is committed to shared objectives. With the help of

internal marketing the company can build a unique culture, and the permanence

of the staff grows.

An office culture is an important part of organizations’ employer brands because

73 % of organizations reveal their culture to allure the best employees to work for

them (Jobvite 2014).

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2.3.2 The strength of an Employer Brand

To get a strong position on the labour market a company needs to create an

employer brand strong as possible. Moroko and Uncles (2008) have defined the

key features of a strong employer brand as follows:

1. Brand awareness with current and potential employees.

2. The relevance of the brand in the eyes of current and potential employees.

o What kind of package is offered to the (current and future)

employees?

o What is the employee value proposition?

3. How does the brand differ from the competitor’s brand?

o Challenging to execute in practise

4. The brands ability to fill its promises

o A psychological contract is the key here; in other words, the

employee gets what is promised to him/her, for instance,

through marketing or in an interview. Especially standing out

from the competitors demands some investments from the

organization.

For the freshly graduated who are taking the first steps into the working life the

difference between potential employers might be very marginal or even none

existing.

2.3.3 Instrumental and symbolic dimension

An employer brand can be researched through its instrumental and symbolic

features. Previous researches support the usefulness of the framework of

instrumental and symbolic in understanding employer brand (Lievens 2007).

Both instrumental and symbolic features have been noticed to have a huge impact

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on the employer brand attractiveness in the eyes of potential job applicants and

the current employees (Lievens 2007).

The instrumental features indicate to the organization’s or work’s concrete and

objective attributes. For instance, salary, benefits, flexible working hours, and the

location of the work place are considered to be instrumental features. The

features like the above-mentioned wake the interest of the job applicants mainly

because of their usefulness. (Lievens & Highhouse 2003.)

Lievens (2007) studied the army and according to the results instrumental

features had an impact on the actual job applicants and how they felt the

attractiveness of the employer brand more strongly than on the potential job

applicants and the current employees. One reason for this might be that the actual

job applicants collect fact-based concrete information about the employer. This

did not diminish the meanings of the symbolic features because they were

perceived to have a significant impact on all three above mentioned groups and

how they see the employer image. (Lievens 2007.)

The symbolic dimension indicates to work and organization’s subjective and

intangible features (Lievens 2007). These are attributes that stem from the work

of individuals, their observations and conclusions. Examples of symbolic factors

are innovativeness and authority. (Wilden et al. 2010.) Symbolic features relate

to supporting identity, improving self-image, and self-impression (Lievens

2007). For instance, a desire to apply for a certain job might appear because the

applicant sees the job as exciting which can reflect his/hers self-image. Previous

research (e.g. Berthon et al. 2005) has shown that the more organization’s brand

is in line with the needs and values of the potential employers, the more attractive

the individuals feel the job.

It is important to take into consideration both of these dimensions (Wilden et al.

2010). Although, it has been observed that the intangible attributes have a bigger

effect on the employer attractiveness than the tangible features (Lievens 2007).

This was seen also in the results of Universum’s student survey. The survey

showed that the respondents appreciated especially the versatility of the work

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tasks, friendly atmosphere, job leadership and management, respecting the

employees, as well as the competitiveness of the salary (Universum 2015b).

2.3.4 The Future of Employer Branding

Employer branding is heading more and more to the digital world, social media.

According to Bondarouk and his fellow researchers (2013), the employer

branding’s strategic future should be taken into consideration because social

media – and especially the use of it – will be keeping to grow in the future as well.

In their study, Bondarouk and his colleagues (2013) used the Delfoi-method to

interview experts, HR-professionals, and academics on the subject of employer

branding’s and social media’s future. According to the study, the impact to

employer branding and HR of social media in the years of 2013-2018 are going to

be as follows:

Academics HR-professionals

1. Cost monitoring 1. The visibility of the company

2. Transparency 2. The empowerment of the employees

3. Targeting when it comes to

recruiting from the target group

3 Employer image

4. Interactivity 4. The company policies

5. The ways of communicating 5. The internal communication and

information sharing

Table 1. The impact of social media on employer branding and HR in the years of

2013-2018 (Boundarouk et al. 2013).

As it can be seen from the table 1, academics and HR-professionals have some

common thoughts but some different ideas as well on how the future of employer

branding is going to look like. This raises some questions, and it might be useful

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for the academic researchers to work together with the practical professionals

when forecasting the future of employer branding and the digital side of it.

2.4 Employer Reputation

Reputation is easy to understand as a word because it is used frequently in

everyday conversations. It is fairly easy to understand if a company has a good or

a bad reputation. In dictionary descriptions the focus is on the following three

things:

A reputation is something people talk and tell others about

Evaluation is connected to reputation that can be good or bad and it

separates the target from similar ones

A reputation is a recipient-centered phenomena

(Aula & Heinonen 2002.)

According to Argenti (2009), a company’s employees are a valuable point to begin

for measuring a company’s reputation because they are those who put the

organization’s values into practice. Hence, it does not come as a surprise that

conducting how potential and current employees see the company reputation has

recently turned into a board-level concern (Hepburn 2005).

According to Viitala (2007), employer image does not change easily because it is

formed during a long period of time. Although, a meaningful organization-related

theme might affect the way one sees an employer image negatively. The positive

changes happen much slower. (Viitala 2007.)

According to Fombrun (1996), a holding reputation is achieved by creating a

strong interaction relationship with customers and with other important

stakeholders. All the past and present actions have an impact on the reputation.

To get a good reputation the organization needs to provide a good job for its

employees, provide products and services on the right way to its customers, be a

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good investment to its investors, and be highly valued as a company citizen within

its local community. (Fombrun 1996.)

Employer reputation is also related to employer branding. While the goal of

employer branding is to show the differences of the company compared its

competitors by featuring what it can offer as an employer and by using marketing

tools to advertise those attributes, employer reputation takes a more overall view.

When building an employer reputation a company needs to acknowledge other

ways of managing a reputation than only doing marketing campaigns. (Davies

2008.) Hepburn (2005, 20) defines employer reputation as “based on what you

do as an employer plus what you say you do; how you communicate to the outside

world as an employer”. He has further defined the building blocks of employer

reputation as corporate reputation, culture, people, policies, and values. Figure 2

is a visualization of his idea.

Figure 2. The four elements of employer reputation (Reprinted from Hepburn,

2005, p. 21).

It is said that being a good employer is no longer enough (Hepburn 2005).

Instead, a company need to be seen as a good employer in order to maintain

existing employees and to attract the potential ones. According to a study,

Employer Reputation

Values

Culture

Corporate Reputation

People Policies

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stakeholders will only act and feel positively towards a company if it has shown a

similar positive disposition towards them (Lewis 2001).

The base of organization’s reliability is the expectations of the customers

(Fombrun 1996). The promises given of the products and services should be filled

in order to keep the trust of the customers. On the other hand, the investors

expect the organization to have credibility and that the management of the

company commit to the promises given in different financial messages.

Responsible actions are also expected of the company from the society’s side.

(Fombrun 1996; Heinonen & Aula 2011.)

Fombrun (1996) sees the organization’s reputation as intangible capital and with

the help of it the organization can get some competitive advantage. Reputation

capital is born when the organization’s inner and outer target groups are satisfied

with the actions of the organization. Within a company with a good employer

reputation the employees are more committed and the turnover of the personnel

is small. This kind of organization is also more attractive and more trustworthy

as an employer in the eyes of potential employees. (Fombrun 1996.)

Heinonen and Aula (2011) emphasize the meaning of trust-building marketing.

Understanding the ultimate meaning of a company’s existence, summarizing, and

communicating are the essential parts of building a reputation. In this sense, this

dimension meets the definition of trustworthiness by Fombrun (1996).

Building a good reputation is a common project where both the company and its

stakeholders together define the company and build its reputation (Heinonen &

Aula 2011). This model of building a reputation describes well the challenges

within building a reputation in today’s societies. The basic principles defined by

Fombrun (1996) are not likely to lose their meaning in the near future, but it is

good to consider the changing factors as well.

The employer reputation is a more specific part of reputation that Juholin (2008)

divides into outer and inner employer reputation. The outer evaluation of the

employer reputation is build, for instance, from the visions on how well the

organization is lead or how tempting as an employer the potential applicants see

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the organization (Fombrun & Gardberg 2000). Looked from inside the company,

employer reputation is the appraisal given by members of the work community

on the organization’s reputation and what it should. Both the inner and outer

evaluations concern the organization’s attractiveness, responsibility, and honor,

most commonly. (Juholin 2008.)

Due to changes in social structures (Hepburn 2005) and people’s attitudes

towards work (Herman & Gioia 2011) attracting and retaining employees have

become challenging. A job or a career means more than just paying the rent

nowadays, it has value and relevance for an individual (Hepburn 2005). Instead

of transporting only pre-planned agendas companies’ communicators should

notice and accept the priorities of the audiences (Lewis 2001) because the choice

of applying to a company and not to their competitor is also affected by affective

states, attitudes, and beliefs (Allen, van Scotter, & Otondo 2004). Fombrun

(2008) argues that there are similarities with the processes with employer and

employee decision makings: in the same way as managers use employees’

reputations to make personnel decisions and prefer better-regarded

professionals, the employees prefer to work for better-regarded companies

Companies need to constantly streamlining their processes simultaneously with

the mentioned developments in social structures and applicants’ expectations

alone. Hence, they are becoming even more dependent on current employees’

performance as well as on holding right the kind of talent that can develop their

organization (Hepburn 2005). Those companies that do succeed in managing and

holding their employer reputation are seen as ‘employers of choice’. This can cost

a lot in a short period of time but the goal of growing to an employer of choice will

bring benefits to the company through better candidates in the long term

(Torrington, Hall, & Taylor 2008) and also help it to gain a competitive advantage

(Hepburn 2005).

There are several benefits to having a good employer reputation (Hepburn 2005).

These benefits do mean “more effective recruitment processes, increased

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employee motivation and retention, more diverse workforce, gaining a

competitive advantage, positive consumer perceptions, and tenacity in times of

crisis” (Hepburn 2005, 21). Smith, Gregory, and Cannon (1996) had a similar idea

already in 1996; they suggested that employee commitment affects positively

employee satisfaction which in turn has an impact on a company’s success.

Another supporting result is by Cable and Turban (2003): according to their

findings, job applicants’ impressions of a company were influenced by corporate

reputation and corporate familiarity which then had an impact on their

impressions on the job’s attributes and expected organizational membership

pride, which in turn has an impact on the intentions of job-pursuit and the

required minimum salary.

Halo effect is also mentioned when employer reputation is discussed. Helm

(2007) defines it as an effect where participants who do not have enough

knowledge about an attribute of a company base their impression of that

characteristic on another they do have knowledge about. They might even

emphasize those attributes that have personal meaning to them. So, should a

company not actively provide information and sources of reference about

themselves, might potential employees base their observations of the company as

an employer on the materials that they are able to find – some of which might not

be relevant to do the evaluation on. (Helm 2007.)

2.4.1 Encounters

Reputation is born in different encounters. Stakeholders make interpretations of

the actions of the organization in these interaction situations. In turn, these

interpretations construct the images of the organization, which form the

organization’s reputation. (Aula & Heinonen 2002.) How an encounter is born

can be seen from Figure 3.

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Organization Reputation Stakeholder

Encounter

Figure 3. The making of reputation (Aula & Heinonen 2002, 90).

Reputation has three levels:

Level 1: the company and stakeholders meet face-to-face, e.g. press

conferences and direct customer service situations

Level 2: interaction situations where a stakeholder meets a product or

service provided by the organization, but the organization might not be

present personally

Level 3: an encounter where the organization is not directly present, e.g. a

news or advertisement

(Aula & Heinonen 2002.)

On the first level, the encounters are demanding for the forming of the reputation

and failing with the affects negatively to the following encounters. If a customer

has once received bad service, it is hard to get that customer to buy some other

new products from the organization. Bad experiences are also usually shared to

others. (Pitkänen 2001; Aula & Heinonen 2002.)

With the second level encounters previous experiences and images have an effect.

Within these encounters the stakeholder often needs to choose between a specific

product and service. Hearsay and discussions with others affect the encounters.

In the third level encounters the stories made by the organization and the images

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of the stakeholders take the leading role. In that case, media communication and

media publicity make the reputation. (Pitkänen 2001; Aula & Heinonen 2002.)

Organizations should prepare to encounters of every level and recognize the

meanings of these encounters to different stakeholders. Big advertisement

campaigns from the third level are no use to be organized if the first level

customer encounters do not grow the reputation. (Aula & Heinonen 2002.)

2.4.2 The Dimensions of a Reputation

Reputation is a culture-bound phenomena. It varies between countries and

between subcultures inside a country what is valued at the time. Cultural,

economic, and social differences make the reputation building and maintaining

challenging. In addition, reputation is dependent on time. It follows the current

trends and changes that are prevailed in the social, cultural, and economic

surroundings. (Aula & Heinonen 2002.) Nowadays, the meaning of social

responsibility is emphasized in the actions of organizations, but in ten years

things might be different (Heinonen 2006).

The reputation of an organization cannot be managed without knowing what the

organization’s reputation on a specific time is and what affects it. The reputation

has to be measured in that surrounding where it operates. For instance,

organizations operating in Finland need to know which factors have a remarkable

impact on the Finnish business surroundings. (Aula & Heinonen 2002.)

According to a research, the reputation of Finnish organizations builds from six

dimensions: the organizational culture and management, products and services,

success, social responsibility, public image, and the ability to change and develop.

These, in turn, involve 24 different factors, and based on them Finnish

stakeholders evaluate the organization (Figure 4). (Aula & Heinonen 2002;

Heinonen 2006.)

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Figure 4. The six dimensions of reputation in Finland (Pitkänen 2001, 24).

These sub-factors are commonly appreciated attributes, and with every

characteristic the reviewer gives points to the organization. The total points lets

people know what kind of reputation the company has. (Aula & Heinonen 2002;

Aula & Mantere 2005.) These sub-factors can also be held as a note list that an

organization concerned about its reputation should take notice to. History and

traditions could also be added to sub-factors, some of improves the reputation

significantly. (Pitkänen 2001.)

2.4.3 Evaluating and Measuring Employer Reputation

According to Juholin (2008) employer reputation needs to be observed from

inside and outside. Seen from inside it is an assessment from the members of the

work community about their own organization as well as how should the

reputation look like or what kind they would want it to be. Seen from outside,

reputation is an assessment that potential employers and other stakeholders give

about the organization.

Different surveys measuring employer reputation have become more popular

during the last years, and companies are competing to get in the top of the ranking

lists. Feedback received from these listings can be used in managing and building

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an employer reputation. (Juholin 2008.) In addition to the Universum’s survey

that is being used as data in this thesis some examples of these Finnish employer

reputation surveys are the Great Place to Work –survey and the Graduates-

survey, executed by T-media.

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3 METHOLOGY AND DATA

The aim of this thesis is to investigate at the perceptions of Finland’s best places

to work about employer reputation and especially their use of social media in that

context. The chosen method of research is a qualitative and interpretive case

study. The data was collected by doing a review of their online presence and social

media engagement.

Because of the nature of this research, qualitative research gives the best results.

Usually the objective of a qualitative research is to try to explain the phenomena

as a whole and describe real life and its many sides. It is typical that with

qualitative research, inductive reasoning follows: from personal observations to

more common meanings. (Hirsjärvi et al. 2009.)

3.1 Qualitative method and technique

Content analysis is the choice of method. It is seen mostly as an analysis method

for qualitative data that emphasizes the qualitative and content-related meanings

(Seitamaa-Hakkarainen 2000). With its help mainly linguistic data is researched,

where the researcher tries with the help of different classifications to analyze

structures and contents related to the examined phenomena (Chi 1997).

A well-covered and systematic description of the data-related contents is the

end result that content analysis tries to help achieve. Content analysis can be

executed with the research strategy of ether quantitative or qualitative methods.

The research problem and theoretical frame build the foundation of choosing

and defining the content categories. Content categories can also be constructed

based on the researched data or on an outside concept systems, frameworks or

theories. (Seitama-Hakkarainen 2000.)

Content analysis is text-based analysis and follows a coding chart – as do other

positivistic text analysis. All data is analyzed systematically and objectively so

that the end results correspond with the data’s contents as much as possible and

so that the results are usable for the conclusions. This method should not be

limited to only examining specific words or sayings, but also one should look the

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connections between them. First, the data is scattered into pieces that are

conceptualized and combined with a new way into a logical whole. Reducing,

classifying, and creating theoretical concepts are part of data analysis, which

leads into interpretations, deduction, and into a more theoretical perception of

the researched phenomena. The forms of analysis are data-driven, theory-

driven and theory-guiding content analysis. In data-driven content analysis the

concepts are constructed from the data, in theory-driven the theme, concepts, or

the frame of the analysis are guiding the analysis, and with theory-guiding

analysis the concepts are ready to use. (Grönfors 1982; Tuomi & Sarajärvi

2009.)

Theory-guiding analysis fits to this reserch better than the other two. The

analysis units are chosen directly from the data but the previous information

guides and helps the analysis. The effect from previous knowledge is

recognizable but the meaning of it is not to test the theory but to open new

thought paths. Gathering the data – how the researched phenomena as a

concept is defined – has a free relationship towards the theory part and what is

already known about the phenomena. In the reporting phase the analysis

changes into more theory-driven style. (Tuomi & Sarajärvi 2009.) As a support

to the analysis some theoretical concepts are used but they are not there to stop

whatever kind of themes rising up freely.

With the help of researcher Timo Laine’s (Tuomi & Sarajärvi 2009) instructions,

the analysis’s phases are going to be:

1. The decision: what are the most interesting findings from the data

2. Going through the data, separating and marking the interesting parts.

Everything else is left out from the research. The marked parts are

collected together and separated from the rest of the data

3. Classifying, dividing, or categorizing

4. Writing the conclusions

The analysis of qualitative data is not usually seen as the last phase of the

research process, but the research is conducted cyclically and the analysis of the

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data starts already with collecting it. Usually the analyzation starts by reading

the whole data to get an over-all picture of it. In qualitative content analysis the

categories change and evolve during the analyzing process as well as during

some possible additional data gathering. In other words, the categories are

flexible tools to understand the data. The analysis phase usually ends when

there are no new angles found. Qualitative data is very eclectic by nature: there

is not just one right way to make categories, and one categorization system does

not necessarily fit to another data. Researchers are quite cautious when it comes

to giving standardized instructions to conducting researches, and this is why

they emphasize every individual researcher’s creative work with evolving the

categorization systems. (Seitamaa-Hakkarainen 2000.)

The analysis process is systematic by nature and reaches the whole data, but it is

not stiff or strictly following the beforehand defined categories. New analysis

categories can be born during the analysis as well as in co-operation with the

data gathering. With content analysis it is possible to combine qualitative and

quantitative analysis; in this way both methods can fulfill each other and not be

opposite alternatives. (Moilanen & Roponen 1994; Seitamaa-Hakkarainen

2000.)

Choosing and defining the content categories is the most important phase in

content analysis, and the frame of categories is hardly formed directly. The text

can be coded into beforehand defined categories or the frame of categories can

be created during the analysis according to the content. It depends of the nature

and basis of the research if the beforehand defined categories are leaned on,

they born during the analysis, and what kind of statistical analysis is needed. As

a basis to all classifications is always some kind of categories: variables

(categories)/ themes that are independent from each other. Defining one case in

regards with one variable should not affect the categorization in regards with

other variables. In addition, it affects the analyzing of the data if it is done with

qualitative or quantitative analyzing programs, and deciding about it is

important to do before textualizing the data. (Seitamaa-Hakkarainen 2000.)

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A reliable analysis requires that the data is divided. This can be done with ether

following the language’s outer features or based on meaning contents:

A structural division is based on the outer features of a linguistic report,

for instance, on pauses, silences, sentences, or chapters

Semantic division is based on dividing the content of meanings; in this

case the analysis unit is an idea or a unified whole.

(Seitamaa-Hakkarainen 2000.)

Doing the categorization, or the coding, is based on comparison. Comparing and

confrontation are used through the whole analysis when doing the

categorization. The aim in content analysis is to look for similarities in concepts

that form from elements in the categories. In content analysis synthesis and

analysis combine: the collected data is scattered into parts of concepts, and with

the help of synthesis the parts are rebuild into scientific conclusions. (Grönfors

1982.) In content analysis the data is organized in that way so that the

conclusions based on it can be let go step by step from singular people, events,

words, and be lifted to a more general theoretical and conceptional level

(Seitamaa-Hakkarainen 2000).

To sum up, a theory-guided qualitative content analysis is used in this study.

After collecting the data, a semantic division has been used to do the categories

followed by getting back to the theoretical base.

3.2 The Trustworthiness of this Research and Limitations

Because mistakes are tried to be avoided in all research activities, it is important

to evaluate the trustworthiness of every study (Tuomi & Sarajärvi 2009). In

method literature the trustworthiness of research methods are usually covered

with the concepts of validity (the study examines what is promises) and reliability

(is the study repeatable). Though, these concepts are criticized within the field of

qualitative research because they have originated from evaluating quantitative

research and as concepts their field mainly answers to the needs of quantitative

research. (Tuomi & Sarajärvi 2009; Bryman & Bell 2003.)

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Qualitative research has to also be objective, whereupon the perceptions’

trustworthiness and neutrality needs to be separated from each other. The

neutrality becomes a factor when trying to understand weather the researcher

tries to understand the subject as him, her, or itself or is the story filtered through

the researcher’s own framework. Basically, it is admitted within qualitative

research that this is inevitable because the researcher is the creator and

interpreter of the research design. (Tuomi & Sarajärvi 2009.)

As it has turned out, there is no one unequivocal instruction to evaluate a

research’s trustworthiness. A study is evaluated as a whole, where the emphasis

is on the inner consistent. (Tuomi & Sarajärvi 2009.)

The nature of this thesis is an investigation into the chosen eight case companies

and the features of their social media use, and this means that this study is mainly

applicable as a view into the perceptions and current status of these companies.

This thesis contributes in offering a look at what the situation with employer

branding and social media is in these particular companies during one year’s

time. It provides some thoughts on how companies, presumably at the top of the

employer image game, portray their employer brand and whether and how they

utilise social media in it.

Additionally, using social media as a research subject cases difficulties for the

reliability of the study. The main challenge is that social media does not conform

well to the idea of stability and duplicable results. In the centre are the

perceptions of people, which means that it can be expected that these opinions

may change over time. Thus, if duplicated the results might vary to some extent

from the results and findings of this study.

The choice of companies and the case company method can be considered as

redeeming; these companies have performed well enough in the survey to earn

their statuses in the Universum’s ranking can be seen as an insurance of a good

employer image. Hence, the eight companies can be considered to be a good

reference point on good employer branding, also when using the newer forms of

communication – social media.

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3.3 Data

The data is built from eight (8) companies from three (3) different industries,

according to the Universum’s results from the year 2015 – one company is listed

in two different industries – as well as the factors that build the dream employer.

From the business sector the representatives are KONE, Nordea, and Fazer; from

the IT industry Google, Microsoft, and Supercell; from the technology branch

KONE, ABB, and Suomen ympäristökeskus SYKE. The factors that build a

company into a dream employer are versatile job tasks, friendly working

atmosphere, being a good reference to the future career, supporting supervisors,

and competitive salary (Opiskelijatutkimus 2015).

As the theme of the thesis is employer brand, I am going to look into these eight

companies from one year’s time and how they portray their employer brand

through what kind of content they have published on their own social media

platforms and own webpages. The data is collected under time period from

30.11.2014 to 30.11.2015.

3.3.1 Universum

Lars-Henrik Friis Molin founded Universum in 1988 in Stockholm, Sweden,

while still studying. It all started with a class project to better improve the

communication between students and the companies who want to recruit them.

It was then when Lars Henrik wrote and distributed the first Universum student

survey. The results were interesting and insightful and they made the press.

Employers saw these insights and were surprised by the results. They made

contact with Lars-Henrik and a new company, Universum, was born. (Universum

14.9.2015.)

Today Universum is an international corporation that “delivers surveys to

millions of students and professionals and provides Ideal Employer™ research,

full-service communication and strategic consulting services to more than 1200

clients globally” (Universum 14.9.2015). “With top talent having more choices

than ever in where and whom they can work, a strong employer brand can be a

critical tool in getting the best talent” (Universum 14.9.2015).

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Universum produces new employer rankings every year, and the Finnish results

were last published 28.4.2015. There are six different industries: Engineering, IT,

Business, Health, Humanities, and Law. (Universum Trends and Rankings

22.10.2015.) During the spring 2015 Universum gathered the opinions of over

12 000 Finnish students regarding today’s ideal employers from the industries of

business, engineering, IT, and law. The students represent over 40 different

universities. (Työelämä 15.12.2015.)

The rankings are formed as follows: “Basically, students select the companies

they would consider working for and then select their five ideal employers.

Depending on how many students choose one company as an ideal employer,

determines its ranking position. The most attractive employers are not only the

ones that are top-of-mind, but are also the ones that excel in talent attraction.”

(Universum 2015b.)

In this thesis only Engineering, IT, and Business industries are looked into more

deeply. This selection is done in the interest of aTalent Recruiting where the

recruiting scope is business and technology sectors.

3.3.2 Background

This thesis is done together with aTalent Recruiting, which is a startup–spirited

recruiting agency owned by alumni and student organizations of Aalto University.

The aim of aTalent is to help companies recruit, develop, and attract young and

educated professionals. Founded in 2004, aTalent has grown into a company

which currently employs almost 40 people, and in 2014 exceeded 1,6 M€ in

revenue (information received from aTalent’s CEO, Anniina Tchernych on the

16th of February 2015). The employees at aTalent work with client companies to

find the most suitable and talented employees according to their specific needs.

The focus is on university students and recent graduates, especially in the fields

of business and technology. (aTalent Recruiting 17.9.2015.)

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3.3.3 Introduction to the eight companies

In this part all of the eight case companies are presented. In general the language

of their social media channels varied from Finnish to English. Some companies

had even their own social media page for the Finnish markets. If so this page was

used as a part of the data and not the global one. The reason for this is that the

Universum’s results are based on Finnish students’ answers. It should also be

mentioned that some of the case companies have multiple Twitter accounts (for

instance, for their different products), but in this thesis only the general account

and (possible) careers account are used as the data.

The logos are taken from the companies own web pages.

3.3.3.1 KONE

KONE was founded in 1910 and it belongs to one of the leading companies of the

industry. The company offers its clients advanced elevators, escalators, and

automatic doors as well as versatile solutions to their maintenance and basic

reparation. Understanding of different clients’ needs has lead their way of

operating for over hundred years. (KONE 19.10.2015.)

KONE wants to give the best user experience by developing and delivering

solutions that allay people to move effortlessly between buildings safely,

comfortably, and without delays in more and more urban surroundings. The

themes that are important to KONE are safety, environmental-friendly,

unobstructedness, and design. Their turnover in 2014 was 7, 3 billion euros, and

they employed globally over 47 000. (KONE 19.10.2015.)

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3.3.3.2 Nordea

The history of Nordea in Finland starts with the founding of the first commercial

bank, Suomen Yhdyspankki. The senate verified the licence of the bank in May

21st, 1862. The bank started its activities in July the same year. The name of

Nordea have changed many times, and it got its current form in the end of 2001.

By then the concern consisted also of Danish bank Unibank and Norwegian

Christiania Bank og Kreditkasse. (Nordea 11.11.2015.)

3.3.3.3 Fazer

Fazer started its operation in 1891. They describe themselves as responsible, team

spirited company “that creates taste sensation and fosters beloved local flavors

with a global touch”. (Fazer 11.11.2015a.)

Today Fazer operates in eight countries (Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Latvia,

Lithuania, Norway, and Sweden). In 2014 Fazer Group’s net sale amounted over

1,6 billion euros, and the company employs over 15 000 employees. “Fazer’s

operations comply with ethical principles that are based on the Group’s values

and the UN Global Compact.” (Fazer 11.11.2015b.)

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Fazer gives an employer promise: “At Fazer we think that whatever position

you’re in, you’re an important member of our winning team – an international

and innovative brand house. Join the family that lives for taste sensations” (Fazer

11.11.2015b).

3.3.3.4 Google

The founders of Google, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, met in the University of

Stanford in 1995. First they created a search engine in the year 1996, and Google

was founded in 1998. It grew quickly to a company that services millions of people

around the world. (Google 11.11.2015.)

3.3.3.5 Microsoft

Bill Gates and Paul Allen founded Microsoft in 1975 in Albuquerque, New Mexico,

and it is an American software company. Today the head quarter of the company

is in Redmond, Washington. Microsoft is the manufacturer and seller of

Windows-operating system. In the end of 2014 it employed around 123 000

people. (Microsoft 11.11.2015.)

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3.3.3.6 Supercell

Supercell is a Helsinki-based mobile game developer and it has offices in San

Francisco, Tokyo, Seoul, and Beijing. Currently they have 150 employees, 5

offices, and over thirty different nationalities. Supercell was founded in 2010 and

it is most famous for three games: Clash of Clans, Hay Day, and Boom Beach.

Their goal is to create a new kind of gaming company. (Supercell 28.10.2015.)

3.3.3.7 ABB

ABB was founded in 1988, but the history of the company leads to over 120 years

ago. In Finland ABB operates in 21 places and employs around 5 200. Globally,

ABB has workers in approximately 100 countries and it employs around 140 000

people. (ABB 28.10.2015.)

The company has seven research centers around the world and their investments

in product development has continued in every market circumstances. Their

turnover in 2014 was around 2, 1 billion euros. Today, ABB is one of the world’s

leading deliverer in motors and frequency transmitters, wind turbine generators

and electric networks. (ABB 28.10.2015.).

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3.3.3.8 The Finnish Environment Institute - Suomen ympäristökeskus SYKE

The Finnish Environment Institute (Suomen ympäristökeskus SYKE) was

founded in 1995 to follow the Board of Water and Environment (Vesi- ja

ympäristöhallitus). SYKE is a research and expert institute owned by the Finnish

government that offers information regarding the sustainable development,

knowledge, and services. “SYKE forms part of Finland's national environmental

administration, and mainly operates under the auspices of the Ministry of the

Environment, although the Institute's work related to water resources is

supervised by the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry.” (SYKE 28.10.2015.)

SYKE’s actions are under seven centers: water, ocean, nature, spenditure and

production, environmental politics, laboratories, and information center. The

main tasks of these centers are research and development work and producing

different services. Administrative services, management support, and

communication support the actions of the centers and the management. (SYKE

11.11.2015.)

3.3.3.9 Data Conclusion and the case companies’ social media presence

The thesis focuses only on three separate social media channels: Facebook,

LinkedIn, and Twitter. This is because of the reason that all eight companies are

more or less all presented in these channels, except for two. As it was mentioned

in 1.4, the focus is only on those channels or platforms where all of the case

companies are presented. This excludes in some cases company presence in

platforms like YouTube and Instagram.

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LinkedIn Facebook Twitter

KONE 72 668 - 5 983

Nordea 71 215 26 162 6 067

Fazer 12 035 280 503 12 200/1632*

Google 3 795 975 19 180 964 13.2 M

Microsoft 2 663 762 477 398 7.31 M/65 000**

Supercell 19 308 532 403 199 000

ABB 571 290 381 116 1 044

SYKE - 4 862 4 427

Table 2. The social media presence of the case companies.

* Ura Fazerilla –Twitter account

** Microsoft Careers – Twitter account

Follower/liker numbers checked on November 29th, 2015

3.3.4 Data collection

A review of eight selected companies’ online employer presence was conducted.

The aim was to collect information on how potential candidates, potential future

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employees, would be able to connect with the companies online and get

familiarized to the company’s employer image based on their social media

presence. In practice the review was conducted by analysing the companies’ web

sites and social media profiles.

Every company’s own career page from their web site was analysed and each

social media channel where the company has a profile was read through from one

year’s time and made notes. Based on those notes the analysis is conducted in the

next chapter.

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4 ANALYSIS

In this chapter the data is analysed according to the three research questions

presented in 1.3, which are:

How are companies using the new forms of communication channels

(social media) in building their brand and employer reputation?

What kind of content do they publish in their social media channels? What

kind of posts affect positively on their employer brand and reputation as

an employer?

How are they trying to appeal to new talent?

The data consists of eight case companies and their social media presence in

Facebook, LinkedIn, and Twitter as well as their own career page on their web

site (presented in the previous chapter). But first an overview of the social media

presences of the case companies is presented in the next chapter.

4.1 Overview of the social media presences

The main reason for a firm to care about its employer brand image is to be

tempting to competent, potential, and talented current and/or future employees

to be able to attract and retain those (Sivertzen et al. 2013). Hence, recruiting is

considered to be of uttermost priority for employer brand image (Sivertzen et al.

2013). According to a framework, how attractive as an employer potential

employees see the company depends on the consistency of the employer image,

clarity, believability of the messages transmitting the employer brand, and on the

investments done to support the employer branding. Other factors also, such as

previous work experience and the company’s field, location, and size, have an

impact on the felt employer brand attractiveness. (Wilden et al. 2010.) With this

data and based on these social media sights it is quite clear these companies have

succeeded in being attractive employers. The employer image shown through

social media supports the rankings in Universum’s list.

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As a generalization, it can be said that all eight case companies have active social

media platforms and that they use the new forms of communication channels as

platforms for showing their employer brands – more or less. The way these

companies use different channels varies and some use specific platforms more

especially to employer branding than the others. In chapter 5 the possible

insufficiency of social media explaining the high appreciation as an employer is

assessed more.

In a nut shell, the information over the companies’ employer brands are easily

accessed for the potential employee or job seeker. As it was mentioned earlier, if

the potential job seekers need to use a lot of resources to get information about

the company they might feel that there are too many risks and the employer is

seen less attractive. But if the information found about the employer is found

promising is the felt risk smaller. At the same time, the expected quality of the job

and in that way the attractiveness are seen as much bigger. (Wilden et al. 2010.)

The members of Generation Y are very comfortable in using social media for

working and during their free time. They like to network and through different

social media platforms this is very easy and at the same time these networks can

be global. (Tapscott 2010; Chaffey et al. 2011.) This explains why Finnish

university students can find big, non-Finnish based companies interesting and a

possibility to future employment: because, in this case, through social media they

can easily get in contact and receive the same employer image as they can from

companies based in Finland, the local ones. Social media and the internet make

this possible. This is the reason why a Finnish student can get the same kind of

employer image from a company based in San Francisco and in Sweden. And the

Generation Y members can easily access this information through networking via

internet. More ways and examples on how these eight case companies reach out

specifically to the population of Generation Y are presented in 4.3.

Within the field of business one could say that all three companies are active when

it comes to social media and all of them use social media platforms in building

their employer brand.

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Within the field of IT the results go to two different directions. The two big and

global IT corporations, Google and Microsoft, have a very active social media

presence. On the other hand, Supercell is the least active “social media doer” of

all the eight companies.

Within the field of engineering – same as with the IT field – the two big global

companies, KONE and ABB, are actively taking care of their social media

platforms. Whereas SYKE has a more low profile when it comes to employer

branding in the social media, and it uses these platform more to portray their own

expertise and professionalism.

More thoughts and analyzation about the reasons why some of the companies

might be less active than others will be presented in the 5.chapter. In the next

subchapter the real contents of these social media platforms are analysed from

the angle of the first two research questions, which are:

How are companies using the new forms of communication channels

(social media) in building their brand and employer reputation?

What kind of content do they publish in their social media channels? What

kind of posts affect positively on their employer brand and reputation as

an employer?

After that the text will proceed to answering the third research question:

How do they position themselves to new talent?

4.2 How is social media used in employer branding and reputation?

A good starting point to this subject is that the target group needs to know what

the specific brand is, what is its meaning, what does it do, and what is the gain

from it, also in the long hall (Dahlèn et al. 2010). With these eight case companies

the brands must be quite known to others, to their target groups and

stakeholders, to be named in employer rankings in the first place.

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Aaker (1997) have developed five personality types, or characters, and they are

competence, excitement, ruggedness, sincerity, and sophistication to showcase

the more humane side of the brand. All of the researched companies show these

characters in their social media postings. It is not known if this have been a

conscious decision from the companies’ side but these brand personalities form

a good starting point for marketing communication because with the help of these

describing a brand and understanding its position amongst other competing

brands is easy – it is easier to compare (Dahlèn et al. 2010).

Juholin (2008) divides employer reputation into outer and inner employer

reputation. The outer evaluation of the employer reputation is build, for instance,

from the visions on how well the organization is lead or how tempting as an

employer the potential applicants see the organization (Fombrun & Gardberg

2000). Looked from inside the company, employer reputation is the appraisal

given by members of the work community on the organization’s reputation and

what it should. Both the inner and outer evaluations concern the organization’s

attractiveness, responsibility, and honor, most commonly. (Juholin 2008.)

Naturally in this thesis the emphasis is on the outer employer reputation based

on the method of data collection.

In the next part this theme is analyzed more detailed.

4.2.1 Companies using social media channels in building their brand and reputation as an employer

In this chapter seven different ways of using social media channels are presented

and how they effect on the employer brand and reputation.

Different social media platforms are targeted to different stake holders, and

usually a company only has one channel that they use specifically to create their

employer brand. Other channels can be targeted to their customers and

consumers as well. Companies also tend to mix contents in their social media

channels which gives an image that not all of them have an actual strategy on how

to use social media and on systematic publishing.

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Some of the companies, such as Nordea, ABB, and Microsoft, use their social

media to present their own success within their business. This gives out a message

that they are successful, and naturally employees would choose a successful

company over a less successful one.

Almost all of the companies communicate their values through social media. The

meaning of this is to show potential employees – and customers and other stake

holders – that those are things the company cares about and are ready to work

for. This makes the company more appealing to those who share the company’s

values. Generation Y appreciates that the employer shares his or her own values

(Argenti 2009).

Most of the companies have actually published at least one post when the

Universum’s results were published on spring 2015. Some of them have been

successful in other similar rankings and this is also mentioned in their social

media. They are proud to be considered as good employers and want to let others

know that too. This is also important for potential future employees because for

those who value these rankings knowing how a company has done might make a

change when they decide to apply for a job in one company and not their

competitor, for instance.

On one hand, to show their employer brand companies post blog texts over their

current employees and tell about their regular working days. This gives a practical

glimpse to see what a normal day at work in that company might look like.

All of the companies, except for SYKE, post open job positions in their social

media. This is a good place to let the company’s followers to know when they are

hiring. This is also a good place employer brand wise to show that they are

recruiting because usually that is linked to growth. Today, when the economy is

not so stable, companies in growth phases interest many. Many companies, for

instance Supercell and Microsoft, use some adjectives in their introductionary

words to describe the current employees and to attract similar future employees.

This is a way to let potential employees know what kind of personalities are

valued by the company.

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A couple of the companies posted from public events, such as Slush. This gives an

impression that these companies are trying to attract entrepreneurship-minded

people. Maybe they value this attribute amongst their own employees. Also they

are aware of current phenomena, which is important when discussing employer

reputation (Aula & Heinonen 2002).

4.2.2 The social media content that has a(n) (positive) impact on the employer brand and reputation

The instrumental features indicate to the organization’s or work’s concrete and

objective attributes. For instance, salary, benefits, flexible working hours, and the

location of the work place are considered to be instrumental features. The

features like the above-mentioned wake the interest of the job applicants mainly

because of their usefulness. (Lievens & Highhouse 2003.)

The symbolic dimension indicates to work and organization’s subjective and

intangible features (Lievens 2007). These are attributes that stem from the work

of individuals, their observations and conclusions. Examples of symbolic factors

are innovativeness and authority. (Wilden et al. 2010.) Symbolic features relate

to supporting identity, improving self-image, and self-impression (Lievens

2007). For instance, a desire to apply for a certain job might appear because the

applicant sees the job as exciting which can reflect his/hers self-image. Previous

research (e.g. Berthon et al. 2005) has shown that the more organization’s brand

is in line with the needs and values of the potential employers, the more attractive

the individuals feel the job.

First a general overview from this topic is discussed and after that a more industry

specific dividing is done.

Many companies, such as Nordea and Google, publish pictures over regular

working days of their employees. This is a good way to show what it would look

like to work for the particular company and the potential employee can try to

imagine how he or she could fit into the working community. Usually the

employees are smiling (picture 1) which would suggest that they are rather happy

working there, which is very important (Jobvite 2014).

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Picture 1. A Twiit from Microsoft Women.

In addition to showing the day-to-day working life, many companies post pictures

of after work activities. This gives an impression of tight community that enjoys

spending time together outside working hours. This could be connected to the

norm of entertainment that the members of Generation Y require (Tapscott

2010).

One other way to show how tight of a community a work place is, is Supercell’s

example: they have a picture of their employees in a happy group picture as a

cover picture on their Facebook page. This is quite clever to show the sense of

communality as it is the first picture a potential future Supercell employee sees

when visiting their Facebook page. (Picture 2)

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Picture 2. Supercell’s cover picture on Facebook.

Within some companies they have taken notice into the rhetoric way of portraying

an employer brand. Words are an important and powerful channel to show the

employer brand and reputation (Hepburn 2005). At Google they have launched

a term ‘Googler’ which describes a person who works at Google. Many other

companies use we-rhetoric and indicate that the work community is a family in

their social media platforms (Fazer, for instance) especially regarding posts about

job advertisements.

The big corporations – Google and Microsoft – have published their own advice

on how to apply for a job at them as well as general tips on job hunting. This gives

the impression that they want the applicants to succeed and that they are on their

side. They seem very welcoming as an employer and the possible employees feel

actually wanted. Lewis (2011) backs this up.

One way to stand out of the sea of companies is to have something unique. For

instance, Google gives one good example on this: they have launched a ‘Take Your

Parents to Work’ Day. From Picture 3 a mentioning of the term ‘Googler’ can also

be seen. Another example is ABB’s arranged James Bond movie night.

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Picture 3. A LinkedIN post from Google.

One way to showcase the company’s working atmosphere is to use humor. Here

is one example of Supercell and their Baab the Lamb (Picture 4). This shows the

playfulness of the current employees and can be seen as a sign for the future

employees too of the level of humor at the office. In addition to Supercell

introducing a character, Nordea has also their own who is called Jalmari.

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Picture 4. Baab the Lamb.

4.2.2.1 Industry of Business

KONE has certain values and important themes that they want to bring up front,

such as climate change and sustainability. They also present People Flow Day

which shows many interesting opportunities inside the company. Mentioning

their success in different rankings – other kind than related to employer image –

means that they care about their reputation, work to get praised, and value others’

opinions. (Juholin 2008.) They also use many pictures about international teams

and different positions.

KONE takes the advantage of social media’s attribute about networking and

sharing (Chaffey 2011) when they share private people’s twiits and posts. This

also gives more value to their success when other people notice it and publish

posts about this. Those people might also be current employees and that would

mean that KONE has clearly invested in internal marketing (Backhaus and Tikoo

2004).

Nordea, like KONE, also publishes posts when they have done well and received

awards or honorable mentions. They want to make themselves to seem

approachable by potential employees by letting people know on their social media

that they are present on different career fairs.

Nordea have posted information over their partnership with Aalto Women in

Business and describing this relationship with proud. Other values are written on

their web site where there is a Responsibility tab, from what a social media post

over Nordea’s contribution to society gives a preview. One example on how

caring, humane and how low threshold Nordea has is the picture with the CEO

wishing all happy Christmas.

Nordea always advertises their open job positions with a picture. In these pictures

poses people who are smiling and who look business smart. One idea is that they

try to attract similar people to apply and that they describe the current employees.

Because social media is a place where others can participate (Chaffey 2011) under

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these job posting some comments do occur. Based on the contents it seems like

often the commentators are Nordea’s current employees. This shows that

Backhaus and Tikoo’s (2004) process of employer branding has succeeded in

Nordea.

More of the targeted employer brand images and showing how attractive of an

employer (Berthon, Ewing, & Hah 2005; Berthon et al. 2005; Wilden, Gudergan,

& Lings 2010) Nordea is to new talents of Generation Y is analyzed in 4.3.

Fazer advertises the results of Universum showing that an objective party

recognizes them as an ideal employer. Along with some other case companies,

also Fazer publishes posts that show their values such as green campaigns,

utilizing difference and equal opportunities. One big value choice is Fazer’s own

daycare: they want to support families with children. Mentioning that they are

part of different recruitment fairs they want to some near possible employees.

4.2.2.2 Industry of IT

Google is big with publishing posts about celebrating difference and they

advertise that they are world’s largest corporate buyer of renewable energy. Some

other values Google wants to put out there are equality, giving fair shots for all,

and celebrating difference. One example of this can be seen from Picture 5 where

Google has changed their own term ‘Googler’ into ‘Gaygler’ for making a point.

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Picture 5. Gayglers in California.

Towards potential future Googlers many open job positions are advertised. One

thing related to these are that Google seems to use same introduction or alluring

words with multiple jobs. Same as Microsoft, Google does give their own advice

for people who would want to work for Google. Being such a big company it is

quite natural that they must recruit a lot and because of this they probably want

to give advice for people to succeed in the process and maybe even land a job at

Google in one of their multi-cultural teams.

Microsoft, on the other hand, wants to broadcast the word empowerment a lot

within their social media. This is an important term for them and they want to let

their stake holders to know that. Microsoft are looking for people who build on

curiosity, passions and who drive to make a difference. This is quite inspirational

and does not exclude directly any one out. Same time they offer world-class tool,

industy’s brightest minds, infinite range of opportunities, and freedom. And even

though, they are a big corporation, they show care to a single person. One example

of this is the posts about wishing Microsoft’s VP, who struggling with Parkinson’s,

good health.

Supercell is searching for “super talented and super nice people” in their job

advertisements, which gives the impression that all of their employees possess

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such qualities, and offering an amazing work-life balance as well as top pay. This

paints a picture that the employment is an exchange: the employee brings the

wanted talent and personality and Supercell gives an attractive working

environment plus great compensation of the job well done.

4.2.2.3 Industry of Engineering

ABB has targeted its employer brand mainly towards engineering students. One

example of this are posts about blog texts that tell stories about daily life at ABB

through the eyes of engineering students. The same Nordea and KONE, also ABB

highlights its success in different rankings; Universum’s results have even gotten

their own post.

Of a sense of communality can be seen when ABB posted a picture of Earth Hour.

This also shows that they follow the global trends. ABB lets people know through

their posts that they are committed to a better world, human rights, and the

environment. This portrays their values and they want others to know them too.

ABB has a clear target group that they want to win over: students, both university

and even upper secondary school level. They arrange visits to different upper

secondary schools so that these students can already then start to think about a

career at ABB and possibly make their choices of university studies accordingly.

University students are met at different career fairs and they let people know that

they gladly host visits by different university student groups.

SYKE uses social media quite little to employer branding purposes and to

maintain their reputation as an employer. Some small signs towards employer

brand work can be found. As a most important factor can be mentioned that

SYKE, like many of the other case companies, post a mention of their Unilever

ranking. This shows that they do care how university student see them as a

possible employer. (Juholin 2008.) They also publish posts that tell and describe

how their work is socially beneficial, which portrays their values. And this might

appeal to those who share these values. Also SYKE’s professionalism and

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expertise is shown through blog texts from their own experts about current

phenomena and news.

4.3 Targeted marketing towards new talents

In this subchapter the third research question is answered. The meaning is to

analyse the data from the perspective of how these eight case companies position

themselves to new talent (meaning the population of Generation Y).

Tapscott’s (2010) eight norms for Generation Y are freedom, modifying,

researching, ethicalness, collaboration, entertainment, speed, and

innovativeness, and some of these can be seen from certain publications that are

targeted to this generation.

They value freedom; freedom to be whomever they want to be and freedom of

choice. They want to modify everything – their job as well. They learn to question

and check everything they see and hear. Honesty, sincerity, foresightness,

openness, and holding on to commitments are on the top of the list they value.

They are excellent in working in groups. Speed is something they enjoy, same as

new thoughts. (Tapscott 2010.)

As mentioned before, it was only recently that it was discovered that social media

have a significant impact on the way the Generation Y members notice brands

and companies (Fischer et al. 2014).

4.3.1 Industry of Business

KONE offers global internships for students and graduates as well as

international trainee programs. On their own web site in the career page they

have a sub-category “students and freshly graduated” that is targeted directly

towards the new talents of Generation Y.

Nordea offers a future professional program, which has the word ‘future’ in it

creating an image that after that program the participants are professionals of the

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future. Nordea is not expecting the participants to be already professionals. The

company also offers graduate breakfasts.

To make themselves sound as an appealing employer Nordea publishes the fact

that they are recruiting 160 freshly graduated every year to work for them. They

also give out examples on how to combine work at Nordea with studies by posting

a blog about Nina, the assistant analyst, who is besides work finishing her master

in finance. They give out an impression that they are a flexible employer that takes

into consideration its employees’ personal situations. This is one example of

modification which is one of Tapscott’s norms (2010). Another example of

modification is the possibility of apprenticeship training, a combination of

education and working what they advertise on Nordea’s Facebook page.

Nordea ha also a graduate program, which they advertise with the following

picture 6. From this picture one can see the style that Nordea has – business –

but still the employees don’t look stiff, but more easy-going.

Picture 6. Nordea’s Graduate Program.

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Nordea advertises their summer jobs with a quite similar way but now the picture

has a different vibe. It describes young and enthusiastic students who are not yet

so “business-like” as the graduates in their picture.

On Nordea’s web page, more specifically in their career site, they have only

targeted the new up-and-coming generation with titles, such as, Career

Development, Graduate and Student, and Career News. The content of these is

focused merely on students, consisting of, for instance, tips for writing thesis and

Nordea’s presence on different fairs, such as TalentIT, which is targeted to mainly

technical university students.

One very special feature that Nordea posted on its LinkedIn page, that none of

the other companies offered, is a possibility to download free student literature.

This shows that Nordea values research and wants to help its potential future

employees. Also, the population of Generation Y will value this because they are

interested in researching (Tapscott 2010).

Fazer, on the other hand, takes a little different path and does not take the

Generation Y into so much consideration in its social media. Only mentions of

being present on many recruitment fairs and situations is posted on their

LinkedIn page. Fazer focuses more on creating a more generic good employer

brand and not into wooing the employees of the future.

4.3.2 Industry of IT

Google presents on its web site multiple different trainee programs and gives out

directions how to apply to these. They also share information of the company

culture. This is important because this is one way for a potential future Googler

to know if they would fit into Google’s corporate culture. Google also presents

their own scholarships, and as one can see from this one picture example (Picture

7) it is clearly targeted to multicultural curious students.

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Picture 7. Google scholarships.

Another way Google tries to woe the populations of Generation Y is offering

internships for Google. In the picture below (Picture 8) a happy young woman

seems to be very excited about the opportunity to work for Google. Google is

operating in the field of technology where most of the employees are men, so with

this picture they are trying to convince women to apply as well.

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Picture 8. Google’s post for inters.

Microsoft, on the other hand, advertise on LinkedIn their student-run hub for the

latest content and insights into the life of their interns, apprentices and graduates,

supplemented with a stream of tips and advice for applying to Microsoft. This

shows how much of an effort Microsoft is willing to make to attract younger

professionals and that they truly want new talents to work for them. They care so

much that they give out tips and truly want to see the applicants succeed.

Microsoft also publish that they arrange many versatile introduction days where

the potential employees can come and see how everything goes down for real.

A part of their job advertisement is in the form of YouTube-videos. This kind of

way of advertising open job positions is far away from traditional advertising in

print media, which makes it quite clear that these are targeted to the newer talents

who appreciate innovativeness and technology (Tapscott 2010).

Micosoft has also a tab on its web site called students and graduates, which shows

that they truly value the Generation Y and the potential they bring with.

As an exception, Supercell is the only company of them all that does not

specifically woe any potential employee groups – not at least the Finnish ones.

On their own career page on their web site they have written down ”hooks” for

international talents: they advertise, for example, the Finnish education system

to get the global talents to move to Finland with their families to work (naturally,

for Supercell).

4.3.3 Industry of Engineering

ABB presents career paths for freshly graduated and for those who are starting

their working career as well as for students. The same argumentation that was

presented next to Google and Microsoft applies here. ABB has their own Talent-

trainee program which they advertise on their own website and on different social

media platforms (picture 9).

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Picture 9. ABB Talent Trainee Program.

ABB highlight a rewarded master’s thesis on their Twitter account which means

that they offer possibilities to do a master’s thesis as an assignment to ABB and

as a further incentive they advertise the best ones.

Publishing a post that the Finnish ABB has now joined Instagram (Picture 10) is

clearly targeted to the younger generations because this is once again one

innovative way to reach current employees and strengthen the employer

reputation as well as the potential employees who can see what it would be like to

work at ABB.

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Picture 10. ABB on Instagram.

It is fairly clear that ABB, as a technology company, is interested in targeting the

engineering students. One way of showing this is to publish blog texts that are

about the everyday working live through the eyes of an engineering student. In

addition to this, they have posted pictures of different student excursions, from

Finland and abroad. One example is the excursion to the breakers and switchers

business unit of electronical engineering students from Aalto University on ABB’s

Facebook page (Picture 11). ABB describes these visits with flattering words.

Picture 11. ABB got visitors.

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ABB addresses the new talent directly with job advertisements and they are

clearly visible on fairs that are targeted to engineering students (for instance on

Facebook).

SYKE informs on their web site that they offer tens of different internships and

the recruitment happens through a specific internship system. There is no

mention on any of SYKE’s social media channels of these possibilities or anything

else that could be interpreted as targeting the members of Generation Y. They do

obviously not use social media to make themselves seem appealing as an

employer in the eyes of the new talent.

4.4 General thoughts about the use of different social media channels in employer branding

As it was presented earlier at the moment, pages of social media are versatile, and

they differ from each other with their target groups and the activities they offer.

Some pages are targeted to big masses, like Facebook. On the other hand, other

pages are more focused on professional networks, like LinkedIn. (Kietzmann et

al.2011.)

Companies need to take into consideration how much sharing of information they

enable taking also the information security risks into account. This all needs to be

done well while choosing the channels of social media. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

The relationships define how many options to connect with other users the

application creates (Kietzmann et al. 2011). According to the meaning of the word

‘social’ relationships work as an essential element on social media, because

without them it would all be about structures of codes (Knight & Cook 2013).

Reputation in the context of social media means the amount of content shared by

a user(s) that is visible to other users. Companies can measure their reputation

with objective meters based on the number of followers or viewing times or based

on collected opinions, for instance. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.) When looking at the

Table 2 in 3.3.2.9 the social media reputation of these case companies is quite

good in Finnish context. Obviously those companies whose social media pages

are controlled globally it is rather natural that they have much higher numbers.

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Other kind of data (Google analytics, viewing times and such) are not available

for this research.

All in all, every company that is analysed in this thesis handles their employer

branding through social media differently. It is clear that especially with large

global corporations there must be a strategy on how to be visible to different

target groups.

As the most common denominator, LinkedIn is mostly used to build an employer

brand and to keep the employer reputation as well as showcase their own area of

expertise. Facebook and Twitter on the other hand, have more mixed content.

They can be used at the same time for employer branding purposes as well as for

their consumers and customers (multiple stakeholders). The companies show

their professional side by posting articles related to their field of expertise as well

as working at set company or open job positions for those who would want to

work for the set company. Usually at least part of the posts are the same in

different channels. In the mixture of the social media content the three-faced

process of employer branding by Backhaus and Tikoo (2004) between value

proposition, external and internal marketing can be clearly seen.

According to a research (Manroop and Richardson 2013) only the use of social

media characterizes the Generation Y most explicitly. One assumption then could

be that by using social media companies mainly want to reach this generation.

Hence one argument could then be that all the content would in one way or

another be published for them, which in a way would make sense because it has

been forecasted that until 2020 the Generation Y makes up 50 % of word’s work

force (Raunio 2011).

As a final thought, the strength of the employer brand with these case companies

is quite good when looking them through Moroko and Uncles’s (2008) key

features of a strong employer brand. The brand what these companies represent

and offer is visible both for current and potential employees. But because this

thesis was only about the outside or external employer image, a well-argued

statement can only be made about the awareness of the potential employees:

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being ranked in a public and objective research as one of the most attractive and

ideal employers all of these companies are clear about the brand they offer.

It is not considered to be professional to compare one’s own brand or product

openly against its competitors but almost all of the companies has received some

sort of recognition or awards which shows a clear picture of their own excellence.

The question whether or not a brand is able to fill its promises is not possible to

measure with this kind of research. (Moroko and Uncles 2008.)

But as an ending statement that all companies targeting the members of

Generation Y: for the freshly graduated who are taking the first steps into the

working life the difference between potential employers might be very marginal

or even none existing.

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5 DISCUSSION

Although, most of today’s marketing plans include elements of Facebook, Twitter,

and YouTube, very few marketers actually work systematically to understand and

manage the company’s social media strategy. At the same time they take a risk

when going after the newest application and treating different elements as

different platforms instead of trying to understand the basics. The ecosystem of

social media enables the marketer’s thoughts to be directed to the common

strategy and not the tactics. Working with this ecosystem enables the marketers

to wonder who are part of the target group, on what traditional or social platform

do these target groups live, what kind of marketing content does the company

want to publish, and how do the marketers feed this information through the

ecosystem. (Hanna, Rohm, & Crittenden 2011.)

What comes to the humane side of the brand, the so called personalities, has

Aaker (1997) developed five personality types, or characters, and they are

competence, excitement, ruggedness, sincerity, and sophistication. According to

Dahlèn and his colleagues (2010) these brand personalities form a good starting

point for marketing communication because with the help of these describing a

brand and understanding its position amongst other competing brands is easy.

Based on this thesis, these brand personalities do show in the way the eight case

companies portray their employer brand, at least through social media in

different ways. Interesting is the fact that these personalities were developed

almost 20 years ago and they still can describe the situation today as well. As

Rampl and Kenning (2004) have stated, companies who wish for a head start in

the competition for the best applicants should pay attention to their employer

brand’s characteristics by finding out which traits especially affect positively the

jobseekers’ formation of trust and liking.

It is important to remember that how attractive as an employer potential

employees see the company depends on the consistency of the employer image,

clarity, believability of the messages transmitting the employer brand, and on the

investments done to support the employer branding. Other factors also, such as

previous work experience and the company’s field, location, and size, have an

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impact on the felt employer brand attractiveness. (Wilden et al. 2010.) Within

these companies at least the field of industry probably plays a big role because

they are relevant for their target groups (those who have voted for them in the

Universum’s ranking). Also size must be a relevant factor for the employer brand

with these case companies because the chosen represent relatively big companies,

for the most parts. They have the capacity to recruit plenty, but also money and

resources to focus on their employer branding work. Then again, the sizes of these

companies might just be a coincidence.

***

The purpose of this thesis is to research companies that are considered to be good

employers and the ways these companies portray their employer brands and

reputations through social media, how they can be interpreted, and, specifically,

how these companies address the new talents of Generation Y. This purpose is

addressed with the help of these research questions:

How are companies using the new forms of communication channels

(social media) in building their brand and employer reputation?

What kind of content do they publish in their social media channels? What

kind of posts affect positively on their employer brand and reputation as

an employer?

How are they trying to appeal to new talent?

While analysing the different ways these companies use social media in building

their employer brand and maintaining their employer reputation it became clear

that the ways are multiple. Many of the studied companies use the same means

to portray their brand and reputation which would indicate that these are thought

to be efficient. When it comes to the practical content of these social media

platforms, the employer brand image and reputation are portrayed with many

ways and using social media in different ways. Some examples of these are using

pictures of their current employees, showing their values, describing their

working days, and posting blogs that showcase their expertise.

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The eight case companies are targeting the new talent with versatile ways, some

more eager than the others. Some companies seem to target their whole social

media content or at least the content of one particular platform to Generation Y

offering trainee-programs, for instance. Others have mixed the content to reach

different target groups. The exceptions pretty much in almost every part are SYKE

and Supercell. As mentioned earlier, SYKE does not use social media to showcase

their employer brand and reputation at all and Supercell acts very incoherently.

5.1 Conclusions and Remarks

The conclusive remarks can be divided into eight number of themes.

Between the industries not so many clear differences do occur. The biggest

varieties are between the bigger global companies (Google, Microsoft, ABB, and

KONE) and the smaller, maybe Finland-based, companies (such as SYKE and

Supercell); Nordea and Fazer fall in the middle of this. This might be because the

bigger international corporations more likely have a coherent social media

strategy that they implement on ether global or local level. This is necessary to

keep the package together and have coherent content with many possible

variables when crossing the local-to-global lines.

As a conclusion of the different social media channels, LinkedIn is mostly used to

build an employer brand as well as showcase their own area of expertise.

Facebook and Twitter on the other hand, produce more mixed content. They can

be used at the same time for employer branding purposes as well as for their

consumers and customers (multiple stakeholders). The companies show their

professional side by posting articles related to their field of expertise as well as

working at set company or open job positions for those who would want to work

for the set company. Usually at least part of the posts are the same in different

channels.

Clearly, social media is not the only channels to maintain the employer reputation

and to show how attractive as an employer they are and what their employer

brand looks like. For instance, pictures and posts on social media describing some

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student visitors (ABB) or visitations to different career fairs (Nordea and Fazer)

portray that they are visible to potential employees elsewhere as well. One

indicator is also the high ranking on Universum’s list. Naturally, the employer

image and reputation have formed previously which means that the meaning of

social media is to maintain these images and reputation and not to create them.

To have a good employer brand and to be seen as an ideal employer the ground

work needs to already be done. This is one aspect this thesis cannot research

further.

Some speculations did occur during this analysis and the results of this thesis,

especially on the behalf of SYKE: How should a person who might be unfamiliar

with a specific employer react to those companies who are not presented in social

media? This must mean that they are visible somewhere else, they recruit always

using connections so that the word of mouth is the way to spread the reputation

of the employer, or they are not competing of the most talented personnel.

If companies are interested in recruiting the new talents and members of the

Generation Y social media is a good place to target specifically this generation

because the members are very comfortable in using social media and connecting

to others. Especially because during the upcoming years, the role of social media

in employer branding strategies is envisioned to grow notably, and especially with

the process of recruitments (Fischer et al. 2014).

Thinking about the limitations that this data brings: because it was already

collected it is impossible to find out the factors that those university students had

when selecting these companies to be the best. Have the companies campaigned

on their campuses, have they sponsored something during the school years, are

the students previously familiar with them etc.? If the design of this study would

have been different, for instance interview-based, the background of the data

would have been clearer and some conclusions might have had more valid basis

instead of assumptions.

One thing is to see the picture or image these social media platforms give from

the employer brand and reputation, a whole other story is what the reality is. The

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picture that these social media platforms paints is ordered and given from the

company itself. It is possible that the Universum’s results are also based on some

kind of picture the companies themselves have given. Following this thought, it

is important to realize that difference between the employers’ view and the

employees’ view. In this study these parts are not separated.

As mentioned earlier, social media offers great potential advantages when used

as a part of the employer image strategy, but it and its practical meaning on this

has not received a lot of attention from the academic community (Sivertzen et al.

2013). This is something that could be further researched in the near future,

especially now that the era of social media is ongoing.

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6 SVENSK SAMMANFATTNING

6.1 Introduktion till ämnet

Idag betraktas olika varumärken som ett företags mest värdefulla tillgång, och

det här har lett till att varumärkeshantering (employer branding) har blivit

viktigt för flera företag. Tidigare har företag fokuserat sina

varumärkesansträngningar på produktutveckling men idag fokuserar man också

på HR-ledarskap. Processen, där man applicerar brandingprinciper på HR-

ledarskap, kallas för arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering. Företag använder

arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering för att locka talangfulla arbetstagare och för att

se till att de existerande anställda är engagerade i organisationens kultur och

företagets strategi. (Sullivan 2004.) Idag har flera företag utvecklat ett officiellt

arbetsgivarvarumärke eller är intresserade av att utveckla ett sådant program

(Conference Board 2001).

Bilden av arbetsgivarvarumärkeshanteringen (employer brand image) har blivit

väldigt viktig för dagens arbetssökande. Det här är för det mesta ett resultat av

att de anställdas attityd till arbete har utvecklats (Herman & Goia 2011). Enligt

Argenti (2009) söker de anställda mera ingående kunskap och information om

företaget som hen jobbar eller kommer att jobba för. Arbetet har blivit mer som

en karriär och betyder nu mera för individen än ett sätt att betala hyran på. Detta

gäller speciellt den nya generationen som är på väg ut i arbetslivet: generation Y

(Tapscott 2010). Det räcker inte att vara en bra arbetsgivare utan det måste också

synas att man är en bra arbetsgivare om man vill hålla kvar de nuvarande

anställda och locka till sig nya. (Hepburn 2005.)

En ny oro har uppstått: hanteringen av hur de anställda – nuvarande och

potentiella – ser företaget som arbetsgivare (Hepburn 2005). Det här förstärker

betydelsen av arbetsgivarens rykte (employer reputation). Organisationer tävlar

om att komma först på olika arbetsgivarlistor – så som Great Place to Work och

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Universum – eftersom dessa listor är kraftfulla verktyg i

arbetsgivarvarumärkeshanteringen.

De sociala medierna kan ha lösningar till några av utmaningarna med

rykteshantering (reputation management) och genom hur de fungerar. Idag ser

det ut som att företag använder mycket resurser till kampanjer gällande

arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering. Det kan tolkas som att företagen tycker dessa

kampanjer ger ett mervärde. Enligt rapporter från organisationer som gör

arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering ger dessa kampanjer flera positiva resultat:

tävlingsinriktade fördelar, de anställda får hjälp med att internalisera företagets

värderingar och företagen får hjälp med att behålla de anställda (Conference

Board 2001).

6.2 Motivering av studien och en syftesformulering

Arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering har blivit populärare men den akademiska

forskningen har varit väldigt begränsad med bara några artiklar inom ämnet

marknadsföring. Detta väcker en intressant fråga till ledarskapsforskare: vilka

teorier kan hjälpa oss att förstå arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering och hur borde

man forska i arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering i relation till HR-ledarskap?

(Backhaus & Tikoo 2004.)

Syftet med den här avhandlingen är att undersöka företag som betraktas som bra

arbetsgivare och sätten på vilka de här företagen ger en bild av sina

arbetsgivarvarumärken och sitt rykte via sociala medier, hur de kan tolkas och

hur de här företagen vänder sig till nya talanger från generation Y.

Huvudsakligt fokus i den här avhandlingen ligger på att undersöka åtta (8)

företag och deras arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering och arbetsgivaranseende och

se hur företagen använder sociala medier i konstruktionen av dessa. Jag har tre

forskningsfrågor som jag tror kommer hjälpa mig att förstå detta fenomen:

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Hur använder företag de nya formerna av kommunikationskanaler (de

sociala medierna) i att konstruera sitt varumärke och arbetsgivarrykte?

Hurdant innehåll publicerar de via sina kanaler på sociala medier?

Hurdana inlägg påverkar deras arbetsgivarvarumärke och rykte som

arbetsgivare positivt?

Hur försöker företagen locka nya talanger?

Universums lista är baserad på universitetsstuderandes svar och listan har i

denna avhandling använts som en källa för bra arbetsgivarvarumärken i Finland.

Det är därför jag specifikt har valt att undersöka hur företagen marknadsför sig

för de nya talangerna (från Y-generationen). Det här är också i aTalent

Recruitings intresse och denna avhandling är gjord som ett uppdrag för dem.

6.3 Presentation av tidigare forskning, val av metoder och material

I min forskning behandlas temat med hjälp av tidigare artiklar som skrivits om

sociala medier (t.ex. Bondarouk et al. 2013; Ellison 2008; Bissola & Imperatori

2013; Kietzmann et al. 2011) och som teoretisk referensram används tidigare

forskning om arbetsgivarvarumärket (t.ex. Ambler & Barrow 1996; Dahlèn et al.

2010; Backhaus & Tikoo 2004; Lievens 2007) och arbetsgivarryktet (t.ex.

Hepburn 2005; Fombrun 1996; Heinonen & Aula 2011; Juholin 2008).

Den valda metoden för den här avhandlingen är kvalitativ och förklarande

fallstudie. Materialet samlades in genom en granskning av åtta företags

onlinenärvaro och aktivitet på sociala medier. En kvalitativ studie ger bästa

resultat i sådan forskning. Vanligtvis är syftet med kvalitativ forskning att försöka

förklara ett fenomen som en helhet och beskriva flera sidor av verkliga livet.

Typiskt för kvalitativ forskning är att ett induktivt resonemang följer: från

personliga observationer till mera allmänna formuleringar. (Hirsjärvi et al.

2009.)

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Materialet består av åtta företag från tre olika sektorer enligt Universums resultat

från år 2015 – ett företag är listat i två olika sektorer. Från affärssektorn: KONE,

Nordea och Fazer; från IT-sektorn Google, Microsoft och Supercell; från

teknologi-sektorn KONE, ABB och Finlands miljöcentral SYKE.

Eftersom denna avhandlings tema är arbetsgivarvarumärke, har jag undersökt de

här åtta företagen under ett års tid och analyserat hur de avbildar sina

arbetsgivarvarumärken genom innehållet på sina sociala medieplattformar och

egna webbsidor. Materialet gäller tidperioden mellan 30.11.2014 och 30.11.2015.

6.4 Resultatredovisning och konkluderande avslutningen

Nuförtiden finns det olika plattformar på sociala medier och de har olika

målgrupper. Några medier riktar sig till de stora massorna, så som Facebook.

Däremot är andra medier mer fokuserade på professionella nätverk, så som

LinkedIn. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.)

Företag borde tänka på hur mycket information de kan ge ut med tanke på

informationssäkerhetsrisker. Det här måste vara genomtänkt när man väljer

kanaler på sociala medier. (Kietzmann et al. 2011.) Relationer definierar hur

många alternativ applikationen skapar för interaktion med andra (Kietzmann et

al. 2011). Enligt mätningen av ordet ”social” är relationerna ett väsentligt element

på de sociala medierna. Utan dem skulle det bara handla om kodstrukturer

(Knight & Cook 2013).

Rykte i kontexten sociala medier betyder mängden innehåll som är delad av en

användare och som är synlig för andra användare. Företagen kan mäta sitt rykte

med objektiva mätare som är baserade på till exempel antalet följare eller

insamlade åsikter. (Kitzmann et al. 2011.) Från tabell 2 i kapitel 3.3.2.9 kan man

utläsa att de här företagens rykten i den finska kontexten är ganska bra.

Uppenbarligen har de företag, vars sociala medier når ut globalt, högre siffror.

Andra sorters data (t.ex. Google analytics eller hur många gånger ett inlägg har

fått uppmärksamhet) är inte tillgängliga i den här avhandlingen.

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Varje företag i denna avhandling jobbar med sina arbetsgivarvarumärken på

olika sätt i sociala medier. Det är klart att stora bolag måste ha en strategi för hur

de ska synas för olika målgrupper.

LinkedIn är det nätverk som företagen har använt mest för att skapa ett

arbetsgivarvarumärke och för att upprätthålla sitt arbetsgivarrykte. Facebook och

Twitter å sin sida har mer blandat innehåll. De kan användas både för att skapa

ett arbetsgivarvarumärke och som en kanal till kunderna. Företagen visar sina

professionella sidor med att publicera artiklar som är relaterade till deras

expertisområde, hur det är att jobba på detta företag eller med öppna

arbetsplatsannonser till dem som skulle vilja arbeta hos dem. För det mesta är

åtminstone några inlägg desamma på olika kanaler.

Enligt en undersökning (Manroop & Richardson 2013) karakteriserar

användning av sociala medier generation Y bäst. Man skulle kunna anta att

företagen försöker nå denna generation via sociala medier. Därmed kunde ett

argument vara att allt innehåll skulle vara publicerat för dem – detta skulle låta

förnuftigt eftersom det har förutsetts att generation Y ska ta över 50 % av

arbetsmarknaden fram till år 2020 (Raunio 2011).

De undersökta företagens arbetsgivarvarumärken är ganska bra enligt Moroko

och Uncles (2008) centrala kännetecken för ett starkt arbetsgivarvarumärke.

Varumärket som företagen representerar och bjuder på är synligt både för

nuvarande och potentiella anställda. Men eftersom den här avhandlingen endast

behandlar den ytliga arbetsgivarimagen, kan ett väl underbyggt påstående om

den kännedom som potentiella arbetstagare har om företagen vara att alla de här

företagen har ett klart varumärke och de är listade i objektiv och offentlig

forskning som de mest attraktiva arbetsgivarna.

***

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Det blev väldigt tydligt när analysen pågick att det finns flera metoder att använda

sociala medier på om man vill bygga upp sitt arbetsgivarvarumärke och

upprätthålla sitt anseende som arbetsgivare. Flera av de undersökta företagen

använder samma metoder för att avbilda sina varumärken och skapa sitt rykte,

vilket betyder att dessa metoder förefaller vara effektiva.

När det gäller det praktiska innehållet på de här sociala medieplattformarna visar

sig arbetsgivarimagen och ryktet på flera olika sätt. Till exempel i LinekdIn

försöker företagen ge en professionell bild och på Facebook försöker de

konstruera en image baserad på olika element av hurdan arbetsgivare företaget

är.

De undersökta åtta företagen försöker locka till sig de nya talangerna på flera

olika sätt, en del mera ivrigt än andra. Andra företag ser ut att använda sina

sociala medie-plattformar enbart för att locka in personer från Y-generationen

eller så använder de en plattform bara för Y-generationen. Ett exempel på detta

är marknadsföring av trainee-program. Andra har blandat innehåll för att nå

olika målgrupper. SYKE och Supercell är undantag nästan beträffande allt. SYKE

använder inte sociala medier för att konstruera sitt arbetsgivarvarumärket och

Supercell uppträder väldigt motstridigt.

***

De sammanfattande tankarna kan delas in i sju teman.

Mellan de tre sektorerna syns inte många klara skillnader. De största

variationerna finns mellan de stora globala företagen och de små Finlands-

baserade företagen (så som SYKE och Supercell). Det kan bero på att de stora

internationella bolagen troligtvis har en koherent strategi för sociala medier som

de genomför antingen på global eller lokal nivå. Detta är nödvändigt för att

paketet ska bibehållas som en helhet, eftersom det finns flera möjliga variabler

när man korsar linjen mellan det lokala och det globala.

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Uppenbarligen är de sociala medierna inte den enda kanalen för företagen att

upprätthålla arbetsgivarvarumärket, visa hur attraktiva de är som arbetsgivare

och visa hur deras arbetsgivarvarumärke ser ut. Naturligtvis har

arbetsgivarimagen och -ryktet formulerats tidigare, vilket betyder att de sociala

mediernas roll är att upprätthålla företagens image och rykte och inte skapa dem.

För att ha ett bra arbetsgivarvarumärke och för att bli hanterad som en idealisk

arbetsgivare, måste basen redan vara formad.

Några frågor väcktes under analysen och sammanfattandet av resultaten. Hur

borde en person som är obekant med en specifik arbetsgivare reagera på företag

som inte finns på internet och saknar sociala plattformar? Innebär detta att de

alltid är uppställda och synliga någon annanstans, rekryterar de alltid genom att

använda sig av personliga förbindelser eller är de inte med i tävlingen om de bästa

talangerna?

Om företagen är intresserade av att rekrytera nya talanger och medlemmar från

Y-generationen är sociala medier ett bra ställe att locka speciellt denna

generation, vars medlemmar är väldigt vana vid att använda sociala medier och

interagera med andra. Detta gäller speciellt med tanke på att sociala medier

under kommande år kommer att spela en anmärkningsvärt större roll i strategier

beträffande arbetsgivarvarumärkeshantering och speciellt i

rekryteringsprocesser (Fischer et al. 2014).

Dessa data ger vissa begränsningar: eftersom Universums resultat redan fanns

insamlat, är det omöjligt att veta vilka faktorer de studerande hade i tankarna när

de valde de här företagen som de bästa. Har företagen ordnat kampanjer på

campus, har de sponsorerat något under åren, känner de studerande till dem

osv.? Om den här avhandlingens upplägg hade varit annorlunda, till exempel

intervjubaserat, skulle data bakgrunden ha varit klarare och de sammanfattande

tankarna skulle ha en stabilare bakgrund i stället för att utgå från antaganden.

Det är en sak att se hurdan bild de sociala medieplattformarna ger med tanke på

arbetsgivarvarumärke och rykte, en helt annan sak att se vad som är sanningen.

Bilden av företagen på de här sociala medieplattformarna är skapade av företagen

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själva. Det är möjligt att Universums resultat också är baserat på någon sorts

image som företagen själva ger. Om man följer denna tanke, är det viktigt att

förstå olikheten mellan arbetsgivarens och arbetstagarens synvinkel. I denna

forskning är de här två delarna inte separerade.

Som nämnts tidigare erbjuder sociala medier bra och potentiella fördelar när de

används som en del av arbetsgivarimagestrategin, men sociala medier och deras

praktiska innebörd har inte fått mycket uppmärksamhet från den akademiska

gemenskapen (Sivetzen et al. 2013). Det här är något som borde forskas djupare

i under den närmaste framtiden, speciellt nu under de sociala mediernas era.

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