Step 2. Promote inside your company.
· Hyper-Segmented Messaging
While an average program may draft employee referral program messages once a quarter, the message is usually generic in nature and broadcast to the entire organization. Top-performing programs, on the other hand, may generate thousands of campaigns a year, some of which may be targeted at only a small handful of employees.
Segment messaging may include:
- Employee location
- Job family
- Job performance rating
- Labor type (employee, contractor, consultant, etc.)
- Tenure
- Previous employer
- Past referral success/failure
- Diversity characteristics
- Affinity group membership
- Management level
- Preferred method of communication
- Educational background (degree, institutions attended, etc.)
While some messages are relevant to the entire employee population, the vast majority are not. The secret is to avoid “dumbing down” messages to make them relevant to everyone and instead deliver extremely relevant messages to much smaller populations. It may seem like a lot of work, but the payoff makes it well worth it.
· Three-Pronged Message Delivery
Another key learning from Dr. Sullivan’s research is that not all employees pay attention to the same channels of communication. Some people read posters, while others ignore them. Some people read every email, while others employ filters to sort out only the most important. Some people prefer face-to-face, while others require written materials.
What the research shows is that you need to leverage at least three channels if you want your message to reach a majority of the employee population. What happens if you don’t use at least three? The research shows 72% of employees were unable to recall basic program features when prompted, compared to 43% in companies using three or more.
The key Dr. Sullivan found was the number, not necessarily the use of specific channels. While email was common among nearly all top-performing programs, there were a significant number of top-performing programs that do not leverage email at all, like construction companies.
The most common sources of communication used include:
- Signs in public places (have you considered bathroom stall doors?)
- Email
- Websites
- Intra-office mail
- Voicemail broadcasts
- Team/Departmental/Functional meetings
- Mail sent to employees homes
- Payroll notices/Stubs
Also use the following channels:
- Company newsletter and intranet. Announce special events, such as giveaways or quarterly drawings, as well as the status of the overall program and the status of individuals referred. This should be done on a weekly basis via e-mail, the company intranet or written reports.
- Hold referral parties. Hold quarterly “referral parties.” Eli Lilly is famous for holding “Rolodex parties,” but given technological advances, PDA or email dump parties might be more appropriate. You schedule time in key targeted departments, during a slow period, to meet in their conference room with snacks or even lunch to get employees to give up the names of key individuals that they met recently. These events work particularly well after a large percentage of the team has just returned from a large professional event or convention.
- Referral alerts. Announce in the mailroom, through email, or even over the intercom that there is a critical need for certain position. Just like blue-light specials and amber alerts, this program can excite people and spur action in a short period time.
- Awards and recognition. Providing awards and recognition at all-hands meetings is a simple, effective way to remind people of the importance of referrals. Awards should be given to the manager who encourages their department to produce the most referrals and mention should be made of the number of top performers in the organization who got their jobs through referrals.
- Announce successful hires. In many companies, all employees, with the exception of the recruiting staff and often times, senior personnel, are eligible to participate in the referral program. But when higher-level employees do refer individuals, company-wide e-mails are sent out to announce and recognize their contributions. Their efforts also can be acknowledged at special meetings or luncheons.
· Pay attention to the top-management.
- Include senior managers and HR people. The idea behind a referral program is to get as many people as possible scanning the streets and talking up your firm. To exclude anyone, especially highly visible individuals like senior managers and HR professionals, is not advised. Excluding them makes them feel like they are second-class citizens, and they will not refer at the same rate if they are excluded specifically from the program and the reward. If you’re worried about these individuals referring people who are qualified just to get the money, then these individuals should be fired on the spot. The best programs allow hiring managers or anyone with a perceived conflict to “opt out” of the bonus or donate it to charity.
- Make the business case to line managers. Even if you’ve got the budget for the referral program, you will need to reenergize hiring managers if you want to reenergize your program. Rather than bombarding them with memos and promotional materials, get their attention by reminding them of the dollar impact that referrals can have on their departments. Start by showing them the superior performance and retention rates of referees. Then go one step further and quantify that performance in dollar terms — something they clearly understand. If their department is low in referrals, show them the exact dollar costs as a result of having low departmental referral rates.
- Manager talk. Have key managers give talks at scheduled management meetings characterizing the importance of referrals. Have them share a few success stories, pointers, and program updates. This will generally energize employees who frequently think that only HR cares about referrals. You can get the CEO to announce that she is a big supporter of referrals and has even made referrals herself.
- Incorporate into the motivation system. The utilization of employee referrals is part of the manager’s bonus criteria.
· Educate and train employees.
- Reinforce the employee’s role in building the team. Great referral programs are not about money; they’re about empowering employees to play an active role in building an all-star team for them to work with. Exceptional employees understand that working with the very best people helps them learn, reduces the time required to clean up other people’s sloppy work, and ultimately leads to a better chance at success. The major action to take is to change the perception of who benefits from the referral program. All promotional materials and communications must be redesigned to emphasize this program is “all about them.” The subliminal message is that if they don’t help by becoming 24/7 talent scouts, they might just end up working alongside a lot of pretty average people!
- Educate your employees on how to talk to top talent. You might not realize it, but most employees actually don’t know how to meet and screen individuals for referrals. As a result, they have a bad tendency to refer their close friends or relatives. However, if you are willing to educate them, you’ll find that referral volume and quality will go up significantly. The key to employee education is to help them understand what questions they can ask, and what tools and approaches they can use to identify and to strike up a conversation with the best talent they meet. Teach them that it is okay to use community events, charity events, association meetings, list serves, and blogs to identify potential candidates for referral. You should also consider having individuals who consistently produce great referrals to give talks or mentor others.
- New hires in key positions are asked for referrals on their first day on the job.
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