Are Your Employees on the Brandwagon?
February 2, 2012 8 Comments
By: Mike Milligan, President Legato Marketing & Communications
Ok, so you’ve invested time, energy and dollars into branding or rebranding your hospital. Now it’s time to get the word out, right? How about getting the word ‘in’—first?
Before you invest in marketing tactics to communicate with external audiences, it’s important to get internal buy-in from your employees. After all, who’s going to follow through on the brand promises you make to external audiences? You got it! Your employees.
In the report, “Transforming Employees Into Brand Advocates,” five best practices were uncovered after interviewing experts from academia to healthcare. Here’s a brief summary.
- Share: We marketers have a tendency to keep activities brand-related activities within the confines of our own department. We need to start sharing. Marketing plans, campaigns, brand insights, customer information … Share it—across the organization.
- Involve. How can we expect employees to take ownership of a brand promise if they don’t feel like they play an active role in driving the direction of the brand? Involved them. Let employees’ voices be heard. And listen to what they have to say.
- Personalize: Don’t let your ‘marketing’ title put you on a self-proclaimed pedestal. Create a personal connection with other employees. All of them. Help each employee understand what the brand promise means—every day—in every role they play.
- Enable: Don’t just tell employees what to do, show them. Train them. Create guidelines for behavior. Let them participate in hiring decisions for customer-facing employees. And empower them to do what’s right for the customer.
- Reinforce: Build off of the momentum employees are creating. Small and large-scale recognition practices can help employees stay energized about following through on brand promises.
Got the T-shirt, now what? Keep in mind that employee brand advocacy isn’t created overnight with a free T-shirt, a bumper sticker or an email from upper management. It takes a concerted, continuous effort from everyone from the top down—all the way down.
Once your employees are on the brandwagon, then—and only then—can you truly fulfill your brand promises to your customers.




