The new employer brand: where culture meets communication
A few hiring cycles ago, a startup founder told us,
“We have a great culture, but nobody outside knows it.”
Glassdoor reviews were decent. LinkedIn activity was consistent. Yet when it came to perception, the brand was invisible.
This is where most employer brands fall short. They assume culture speaks for itself. It does not. It needs translation.
We have worked with organisations that are ethical, inclusive and people first on the inside. But externally, their story stops at “we’re hiring.” That is not an employer brand. That is a vacancy.
The strongest employer brands today do not live in job descriptions. They live in conversation, reputation and trust.
The best talent looks at the story, not just the role
Today’s candidates ask different questions.
What does leadership stand for
Do people like me grow here
Is this a place to build, not just execute
And they are answering these questions before the first interview. Through founder posts, media interviews, alumni conversations and social signals.
If your employer brand is missing from those spaces, the best fit talent has already moved on.
Internal culture has no impact if it is not felt outside
We worked with a mid size company that had strong retention and high internal satisfaction scores, yet struggled to attract senior leaders.
The issue was not culture. It was narrative.
Once we identified how growth, mentorship and autonomy were actually experienced inside the company, we translated that into stories. Leaders spoke openly about failure. Progression paths were made visible. Diverse voices were amplified.
Within two quarters, applications increased and recruiter interest followed.
Culture is not a policy.
It is a signal.
And it has to travel.
Employer branding is not HR’s job alone
Employer reputation is shaped by every leader, not just the HR team.
That is why we work across communications, brand, talent and leadership to build a voice that reflects the organisation as it truly is. Not a polished brochure version, but a credible one.
The strongest employer brands are rarely the loudest.
They are the most believable.
You cannot fake culture, but you can shape its story
If your company has built something real, learning, flexibility, access to leadership or meaningful impact, it deserves to be known.
And if it is still a work in progress, that is fine too. Start small. But do not stay silent.
Employer branding is not a vanity exercise. It is a business advantage, especially when the people you want are already comparing stories before they click apply.
About Author

Vikram Kharvi
CEO, Bloomingdale PR
With over 27 years of experience, I specialize in transforming business challenges into opportunities through innovative marketing and PR strategies.
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