showing a lot ofpromise
r e p o r t 2 0 1 2
What matters in your Employee Value Proposit ion
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Leadership and Specialist, Permanent and Contract
Recruitment through 3 practice areas:
professional services group
science & technology group
commercial & support group
p: (+353 1) 632 1800 | e: [email protected] | www.hrm.ie
talking heads
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e m p l o y e e v a l u e p r o p o s i t i o n
Employee Value Proposition (EVP) is the term used to describe, the deal a company makes with employees and
potential employees, in return for their productivity and in particular, their discretionary performance effort.
EVP applies to every organisation that employs people. If talent is important in your business, then so too is your EVP.
In a digital world were reputations are made and lost in nanoseconds, having a clear and cohesive EVP strategy is
essential to managing your employer brand and giving you a cost and performance edge over your competition. An
effective EVP reduces your expenditure, improves your employee commitment and attracts better talent to your
company.
EVP is not just about compensation and benefits. EVP is an employee’s or potential employee’s total perspective on
the leadership style of your organisation, the social kudos of being an employee at your firm, your approach to career
development and promotion, the physical working environment and the organisation’s culture. It is the experience an
employee or potential employee has when they interact with your firm online, in person, or even as a customer. EVP is
the challenge of the work you provide, the stability of your organisation and the learning and development you offer.
EVP is the complete promise that your firm is perceived to offer to its employees and to prospective talent.
Leading global professional services firm TowersWatson, in their 2010 research on the subject, suggest that
“financially high-performing companies are more likely to have an EVP than lower-performing ones”. The reason?
Retention of top talent is more effective, talent pipelines are filled with brighter candidates and as a consequence,
customers have a better experience and are more likely to want to repeat it.
As organisations start to emerge from the dark recesses of the global economic crisis, retaining and attracting talent
becomes central to an organisation’s success. For most businesses, the stabilisation of revenues and the desire to
return to growth means hiring re-starts.
Many professionals who have lived with cost cutting, curtailed or cancelled budgets, changes in leadership or peer
group, along with increased personal taxes, begin to question their commitment to their current employer.
Since 2008, Executives in all functions shouldered greater burdens as a consequence of colleagues having been made
redundant and the organisation’s need to drive more from existing resources. In the aftermath of all that, along with
the prevailing general economic gloom and often resulting anxiety, the demand for better work/life balance rises.
To keep the brightest talent at their organisations and to attract the best candidates from external markets, your
company must be a highly desirable place to work. At the very least, you must represent a better proposition as an
employer or potential employer than your closest competitors.
In the largest ever external survey on Employee Value Proposition, we looked at the factors that make up a positive
Employer Value Proposition for professionals in ten professional functions and across twenty industry segments. The
results of the survey are contained in this report, preceded by an analysis of the respondents and explanation of the
survey methodology.
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t h e s u r v e y - a n a l y s i s o f r e s p o n d e n t s
In many ways, this survey seeks to raise
questions for your organisation, rather
than answer them. Our research goal
was to understand the components that
make up a strong Employee Value
Proposition (EVP) for professional talent.
Creating a comprehensive and
sustainable EVP is a complex process for
any organisation. An EVP “deal”, once
made by an employer must work and be
consistently applied to avoid cynicism
and resulting staff turnover.
People by their nature, and the
specificity of their needs are also
complex, one size does not fit all. To
address this, we looked at EVP through
four classifications. We sought to
understand what impact gender might
have in EVP terms and also, if and how
EVP might need to change as a person
progresses up the career ladder. The
research investigated whether EVP
perspective might differ between
professional functions and also through
industry segment.
10,821 executive employees participated
in the survey with the following
classifications for the purpose of the
research:
GENDER
CAREER LEVEL
FUNCTION
INDUSTRY SEGMENT
An analysis of the classification headings
and the response levels under each is
given in the following tables.
Male
Female
6,786 62.7%
4,035 37.3%
gender
Company Director
Functional Head
Senior Manager
Middle Manager
Specialist or stand alone professional*
*While this category is considered a level, it also includes moreexperienced professionals who do not have people management,department or budgetary responsibility.
career level
554 5.1%
1,101 10.2%
1,663 15.4%
2,907 26.9%
4,596 42.4%
function
Legal
Marketing
IT
HR
Supply Chain
Science
Engineering
General Management
Sales
Finance
Other
216 2.0%
670 6.2%
810 7.5%
957 8.8%
1,384 12.8%
1,032 9.6%
1,046 9.7%
1,012 9.4%
1,096 10.1%
1,479 13.7%
1,119 10.3%
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As an additional classification,
respondents were asked to declare
whether they were currently in paid
employment or out of work.
81.2% of the respondents are currently in
paid employment, with the balance
presently being out of work.
72.4% of those currently unemployed are
male.
The largest Career Level category in the
group of respondents presently out of
work is Company Director. 29.1% of
respondents at that level are currently
seeking employment.
15.9% of respondents at Middle Manager
level are currently out of work.
36% of female respondents are currently
out of work.
It should be noted, that the survey was
conducted amongst professionals with
whom HRM has had some previous
contact, solicited or unsolicited for the
purpose of career movement. HRM
recruits into roles in the career range
middle to senior management only.
As such these figures may not be
representative of the labour market as a
whole.
industry segment
Financial Services 1,006 9.3%
Consultancy 422 3.9%
FMCG 898 8.3%
Insurance 184 1.7%
Professional Services 617 5.7%
Science 509 4.7%
Call Centre 65 0.6%
Distribution & Logistics 725 6.7%
Healthcare 628 5.8%
IT 1,060 9.8%
Telecommunications 400 3.7%
Charity / Voluntary 87 0.8%
Education 173 1.6%
Manufacturing 1,764 16.3%
Public Sector 281 2.6%
Engineering / Construction 660 6.1%
Energy / Environmental 173 1.6%
Tourism / Hospitality 141 1.3%
Media 141 1.3%
Retail 270 2.5%
Other 617 5.7%
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t h e s u r v e y - m e t h o d o l o g y
m e t h o d o l o g y
In responding to the survey, participants were asked to address several statements under six headings, as follows:
1. Reward
2. Career Development and Opportunity
3. The External Organisation
4. The Internal Organisation
5. Perception of the Role
6. During the Recruitment Process
Having reviewed each of the statements under the headings above, participants used a five point Likert type scale to
indicate their response to that item, for each of the first five headings and a three point scale under the sixth. The
questions were phrased so that respondents would evaluate each item as to their importance in value when
considering an aspect of employment proposition. The choices allowed were:
1. Insignificant
2. Unimportant
3. Neutral
4. Important
5. Highly Important
Under the sixth heading “During the Recruitment Process” the scale was reduced to three options:
1. No impact on my decision
2. Some impact on my decision
3. Significant impact on my decision
In each case, the research question posed to survey participants is given at the head of the response table. To
facilitate easier comparison analysis between different response items and sets, a weighting scale is applied and
reported in each case as Rating Averages. The maximum possible rating for a five point scale question is 5.0 while the
maximum for a three point response scale is 3.0.
For the purpose of this report, the data is presented initially under the Career Level classification, with further
narrative that includes Gender and other classification response patterns. Narrative is used, as tables for all possible
cross tabulated response patterns would simply be too much to report here. However, we encourage any interested
party who would like to knowmore about the data or whom has a specific enquiry on any cross tabulation of
classification elements to contact us directly so that we may assist if possible. Feedback, observations or comments
are always very welcome to the email addresses on the following page.
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k e y f i n d i n g s
1. After Salary, the Amount of Annual Leave is the next most important Compensation and Benefit item your
organisation can provide. Company Cars are the least beneficial element to this aspect of your Employee
Value Proposition.
2. The most important aspect to an Executive in terms of where they wish to develop their career is the
stability of your organisation, ahead of defined career paths or commitment to learning and performance
feedback.
3. The results indicate that there are at least twomale managers for every female manager, in Senior
Management teams in Ireland and four men for every woman at Director level.
4. The two factors that most determine the overall value of your Employer Brand are your organisation’s
reputation for ethics and approach to quality standards. Your company’s reputation with customers is the
next key element.
5. In evaluating the organisation’s cultural elements of EVP, Executives regard how the company shows
respect for its employees and how calm the leadership remains under pressure as the twomost important
factors.
6. For Specialists and Stand Alone Professionals,Work/Life Balance is the most important aspect of your
organisation’s Employee Value Proposition. The location of your workplace is much more important to
women than to men. Travel as part of a role is the least attractive element overall.
7. For candidates working in Professional Services, the person to whom they report or would be reporting, is
the most important EVP influencer.
8. Hiring managers need to put the candidate at the centre of your hiring experience and work to establish
rapport, if they wish to hire the best talent. This, along with the level of interest shown at interviews, by
the interviewers, are the top influencers for potential talent in your hiring process.
t h e i m p o r t a n c e o f r e s e a r c h
Judgement is the most important value a recruitment partner brings to its customers. Through this the best in
talent and not just what is available, can be sourced to meet critical talent needs. Expert knowledge of
professional labour markets feeds this and is ultimately what drives our research agenda, as we develop
pipelines of the best talent in each sector for future client needs. Quality research is central to everything we do
at HRM, howwe source great talent, how we create great employment relationships and howwe keep our
clients ahead of their own competition.
For more information contact:
GrahamMorris Managing Director HRM Recruitment Group (+353 1) 632 1875 [email protected]
Michael O’Leary Chief Executive HRM Recruitment Group (+353 1) 632 1817 [email protected]
www.hrm.ie
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Salary
Health Cover
Pension Contribution Level
Life Assurance
Provision of Sick Pay
Amount of Annual Leave
Company Car
Performance Bonus
Share Options
company functional senior middle specialist or ratingdirector head manager manager stand alone average
professional
4.26 4.42 4.47 4.51 4.45 4.46
3.85 3.73 3.83 3.73 3.83 3.80
3.83 3.85 3.87 3.82 3.80 3.82
3.47 3.44 3.40 3.28 3.42 3.38
3.45 3.62 3.55 3.68 3.80 3.69
3.68 3.80 3.89 3.96 3.96 3.92
2.81 2.83 2.86 2.43 2.26 2.48
4.19 4.14 4.02 3.95 3.73 3.90
3.47 3.44 3.18 2.80 2.87 2.99
Please consider each the following compensation and reward related elements.
Rate each of the attributes based on their importance to you in your current role or
when considering a future role?1
• under the heading of reward, salary is the most important evp element• company cars are the least important element of compensation• half of all functions rate amount of annual leave ahead of performance bonus
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As can be seen in the table, Salary and Annual Leave hold first and second place respectively, in overall terms under
this heading. Viewed by individual Career Levels, this is also true of Middle Managers and Specialists, while Senior
Managers, Functional Heads and Company Directors give Performance Bonus as their second most important Reward
based EVP element. Company Car features as the least important element for all. There is little significant difference
between genders under this heading, other than in the Provision of Sick Pay and Amount of Annual Leave elements
where female respondents attach 10%more importance to these than male respondents. Share Options are perceived
as more important to men by a similar margin.
While Salary is the most important factor for all functions, professionals in Legal, IT, HR, Science and Finance indicate
that Amount of Annual Leave is their second highest influencing factor. Those working in Marketing, Supply Chain,
General Management and Sales rate Performance Bonus as their next most important element, while Engineers
choose Pension Contribution Level.
While all industry segments indicate Salary as their most important compensation related EVP element, IT, Life
Sciences and Manufacturing choose Health Cover as their next priority. Pension features the second biggest attraction
for Healthcare and Charity/Voluntary segments, while Provision of Sick Pay is the Insurance industry’s choice at this
level. Performance Bonus has the largest number of segments selecting it, chosen by Consultancy, FMCG, Call Centre,
Distribution & Logistics, Telecommunications, Engineering/Construction, Energy/Environmental and Media. All others
not mentioned here selected Amount of Annual Leave as their second choice.
Leadership and Specialist,
Permanent and Contract
Recruitment through 3 practice
areas:
professional services groupscience & technology groupcommercial & support groupp: (+353 1) 632 1800 | e: [email protected] | www.hrm.ie
heads talking
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c a r e e r d e v e l o p m e n t & o p p o r t u n i t y
Please review each of the following attributes related to the development of your
career. Rate each element based on its importance to you in your current role or when
considering a future role.2
Formal Career Planning
Provision of Study Support
Organisation Commitment to Learning &
Development
Allocation of a Senior Executive as Mentor
Company with Policy to Promote
Internally
Clear Career Paths
Organisation's Growth Rate
Organisational Stability
Performance Feedback
company functional senior middle specialist or responsedirector head manager manager stand alone totals
professional
3.8 3.83 3.95 3.97 3.89 3.91
3.0 3.5 3.46 3.63 3.73 3.6
4.02 4.08 4.18 4.13 4.14 4.13
3.24 3.5 3.61 3.54 3.41 3.48
3.71 3.91 3.96 4.08 4.03 4.0
3.75 3.92 4.1 4.07 4.07 4.05
3.88 4.0 4.05 3.97 3.85 3.93
4.04 4.21 4.36 4.33 4.26 4.28
4.2 4.34 4.35 4.31 4.17 4.25
• under the heading of career development, stability is the most important evp element overall• mentoring is the least important attribute• females place a higher value on structured career development than their male counterparts
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The higher two Career Levels select Feedback, Stability and Learning as their most important elements. All other
respondents select similarly but reversing Stability and Feedback, suggesting possibly that higher level leaders are
more comfortable with ambiguity and insecurity. Factors such as Formal Career Planning, Provision of Study Support
and Organisation Commitment to Learning and Development appear to be less important as one rises through a
career. However, other elements including the Allocation of a Senior Executive as Mentor, Performance Feedback and
Organisation’s Growth Rate appear to peak in the Middle at Senior Manager, a point most typically when ambition
and career growth may be foremost in the Executive mind.
Female respondents gave a higher rating in every one of the nine elements under the heading for Career Development
than their male counterparts. The gap is most pronounced under the factor Company with Policy to Promote
Internally. 50% of females also rated Organisational Stability as highly important. Perhaps by placing a higher value
on these elements, women suggest they do not experience career progress to the same extent as men. Do women
prefer to stay with a company to develop their career? Does this make themmore loyal as employees and do they
suffer in their career development as a consequence? Only 23% of female respondents describe themselves as being in
the top three of the Career Levels in this survey, compared with 35% of males.
Professionals in Marketing, IT, Supply Chain and HR all see Performance Feedback as the attribute of most importance
in the Career Development aspect of Employee Value Proposition. Given the torrid few years that HR have had to work
through, unsurprisingly Organisational Stability is their second priority. In fact, those who work in Science,
Engineering, General Management, Sales and Finance rated Organisational Stability as their number one element,
while Legal professionals list Clear Career Paths and Performance Feedback as their one and two respectively.
Industry Segments; Consultancy, Professional Services, Healthcare, IT, Telecoms, Charity/Voluntary, Manufacturing,
Tourism/Hospitality and Retail choose Performance Feedback as the most important EVP attribute under this heading.
Organisational Stability is the next most popular overall and rated as the most important aspect for Financial Services,
Insurance, Science, Distribution/Logistics, Education, Engineering/Construction, Energy/Environmental,
Tourism/Hospitality and Media. These are of course, all segments that have seen more rationalisation than most over
the last few years. Organisation Commitment to Learning & Development (Public Sector) and Clear Career Paths (Call
Centre) were the other first choices for segments under this heading.
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The company's reputation withcustomers.
The diversity of the company's workforce.
The company's approach to environmentalresponsibility.
The company's approach to corporatesocial responsibility.
The company's approach to ethics.
The company's recognition as a "GreatEmployer".
The company's market share and position.
The company's approach to qualitystandards.
The use of current and emergingtechnology.
The size of the organisation.
The industry sector the company is in.
The awareness of the organisation'sbrand.
The organisation's reputation forinnovation.
The opinion held by your friends or familyof the organisation.
company functional senior middle specialist or responsedirector head manager manager stand alone totals
professional
4.48 4.22 4.29 4.15 4.1 4.17
3.21 3.42 3.4 3.47 3.44 3.43
3.44 3.57 3.51 3.52 3.52 3.52
3.46 3.75 3.73 3.63 3.58 3.63
4.33 4.28 4.25 4.21 4.14 4.2
3.56 3.76 3.76 3.74 3.63 3.69
3.5 3.66 3.68 3.53 3.37 3.5
4.31 4.16 4.2 4.24 4.13 4.19
4.13 4.1 4.12 4.1 4.11 4.11
2.96 3.16 3.21 2.99 3.07 3.07
3.29 3.39 3.51 3.47 3.5 3.47
3.31 3.69 3.71 3.52 3.43 3.52
3.9 4.02 3.98 3.83 3.86 3.89
3.1 3.03 3.15 3.17 2.95 3.06
Please consider the following characteristics and behaviours of an organisation and
rate them on their level of importance to you, in your decision to stay with your
current organisation or your decision to choose a new organisation as an employer?3
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An organisation’s approach to Ethics is the combined most important element for respondents under the heading
External Organisation Perspective. All categories of Career Level selected this as either their most, or next most
important element.
The company’s approach to quality standards is the second factor overall, most likely to create a positive external
perspective. All Career Levels selected this in their top three. All but one category of Career Level selected The
organisation’s reputation with customers, in their top three choices, with Specialists or Stand Alone Professionals
being the exception. Company Directors and Senior Managers gave this element their most important rating.
Male and female respondents agree that The company’s approach to quality standards and The company’s reputation
with customers are both top three influencers. However, they disagree in what they believe to be the highest factor
with men picking The use of current and emerging technologywhile female participants chose The company’s
approach to ethics. Female respondents also see The diversity of the company’s workforce as a much greater
attraction than their male counterparts, also placing more emphasis on The company’s approach to environmental
responsibility and The company’s approach to CSR in their evaluation of a company’s EVP.
The functions of Marketing, Supply Chain and Sales name The company’s reputation with customers as their most
important attribute under the External EVP heading. HR, Engineering, General Management and Finance give this
second billing. Legal, HR and Finance rate The company’s approach to ethics as their top characteristic. Engineering
and IT list The use of current and emerging technology as their most influential factors, while Science and General
Management indicate The company’s approach to quality standards.
The company’s reputation with customers is the first choice EVP attraction under this heading for the Insurance
segment, along with Professional Services, Call Centre, Healthcare, Telecoms, Charity/Voluntary, Education,
Energy/Environmental, Tourism/Hospitality and Media. The organisation’s approach to ethics is the priority for
Consultancy, Call Centre, IT, Public Sector, Engineering/Construction and Retail. The remaining segments select The
company’s approach to quality standards as their number one with the exception of IT who cite unsurprisingly, The
use of current and emerging technology. Ethics is the second most important choice for Financial Services, while Call
Centre professionals see the industry sector that their Call Centre is attached too as their next priority. The highest
rating for The opinion held by your friends or family of the organisationwas given by Charity/Voluntary. The Public
Sector gave this their lowest rating, which was the lowest rating by any segment of any attribute under this heading.
• under external perspective, ethics followed very closely by quality standards were the top overall evpelements
• the opinion of family and friends has the lowest value, except for those who work in charity/voluntary
• marketing, sales and supply chain functions see the company’s reputation as the most importantevp aspect
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A team-orientated work environment.
The quality of co-workers.
The reputation of the senior leadershipteam.
The quality of the organisation'smanagers.
The camaraderie amongst the company'sworkforce.
The leadership being calm under pressure.
The company's informal workingenvironment.
How the company shows respect foremployees.
The level of risk encouraged by thecompany.
The level of employee empowerment thatis encouraged.
company functional senior middle specialist or responsedirector head manager manager stand alone totals
professional
4.06 4.09 4.12 4.15 3.89 4.03
4.15 4.32 4.26 4.33 4.27 4.28
4.21 4.35 4.38 4.23 4.16 4.24
4.4 4.4 4.43 4.4 4.39 4.4
4.06 4.13 4.16 4.26 4.19 4.19
4.58 4.33 4.44 4.4 4.33 4.38
3.81 3.72 3.75 3.8 3.78 3.78
4.54 4.48 4.61 4.63 4.58 4.58
3.81 3.7 3.65 3.63 3.5 3.59
4.15 4.24 4.14 4.18 4.08 4.14
Please rate the following attributes based on their importance to you in your current
role or when considering a future role?4
• under the heading of internal perspective, respect for employees is the most important evp element• the level of risk encouraged by the organisation is the least important• company directors see the leadership being calm under pressure as their most important element
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How the company shows respect for employees is the top overall attribute under the heading Internal Perspective of
the Organisation. All bar one of the Career Level categories selected this as their most important, with Company
Directors choosing The leadership being calm under pressure as the most important factor. In fact all categories of
Career Level also choose this element somewhere in their top three.
This gives an indication as to how an organisation might develop its internal culture in order to retain bright talent.
However, the challenge remains for companies to find methods of communicating externally their success in these
areas, in order to improve the quality and accuracy of their talent pipelines.
How the company shows respect for employees is the top choice for both male and female respondents. The
quality of the organisation’s managers and The leadership being calm under pressure are second and third choice
respectively for women, a pairing that is reversed for men. The quality of co-workers and The reputation of the
senior leadership teamwhile important to men are higher priority for women. Males are drawnmore by The level of
risk encouraged by the company.
All Functions combined describe How the company shows respect for employees as their number one EVP element
under this heading. This factor achieves the second highest score of all of the attributes to EVP within the survey.
Legal, HR, Science, Engineering, Sales and Finance see The quality of the organisation’s managers as their second
highest factors, while The leadership being calm under pressure is the second highest factor for Marketing, Supply and
General Management. IT rate The quality of co-workers as the second most important EVP element under this
heading.
All industry segments chose How the company shows respect for employees as their most important EVP
element, with the exception of Engineering/Construction and Public Sector (The leadership being calm under
pressure). Financial Services respondents gave joint second place to The quality of the organisation’s managers and
The quality of co-workers.
facingchanges?Interim & Contract
Professionals from HRM
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The opportunity to travel as part of yourrole.
The level of innovation encouraged in yourrole.
Your role's influence on decision making.
The leadership listening to employeesopinions when making decisions.
Your personal interest in theresponsibilities of your role.
The location of where your role is based.
The work/life balance your role offers.
The level of recognition provided toemployees in your role.
The person to whom you report or wouldbe reporting to.
company functional senior middle specialist or responsedirector head manager manager stand alone totals
professional
2.79 3.01 2.94 2.84 2.84 2.87
4.25 4.06 3.99 3.91 3.99 3.99
4.65 4.46 4.53 4.25 4.1 4.28
4.42 4.4 4.35 4.45 4.41 4.41
4.52 4.39 4.53 4.48 4.43 4.46
3.52 4.03 3.91 4.12 4.1 4.04
3.83 4.19 4.25 4.38 4.49 4.36
4.25 4.26 4.27 4.36 4.29 4.3
4.29 4.34 4.47 4.4 4.28 4.35
Please rate the following characteristics of your current role or when considering a
future role, based on their importance to you?5
• under the heading of role perception, a personal interest in the responsibilities is the combined mostdesirable evp attribute
• the opportunity to travel is the least desirable element and the second least important across thesurvey
• to whom you report is the most significant attraction here to respondents in professional services
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For the top three levels on the career ladder, the Role’s influence on decision making is the most important EVP factor.
For Middle Managers the top attribute is Personal interest in the responsibilities of the rolewhich is also the top
overall element. The category of Career Level, Specialist or Stand Alone Professionals chose The work/life balance the
role offers as their most important factor. For Function Heads, Senior Managers and Middle Managers The Person to
Whom they Report is a top three EVP priority.
Having a personal interest in the responsibilities of their roles, is an EVP priority for both male and female
respondents. However, The location of where the role is based has a much bigger priority for women than men while
the reverse can be said about The opportunity to travel as part of a role. The level of recognition provided to
employees and The person to whom you report are also more important factors for women than their male
counterparts.
Analysis of respondents by Function shows considerable difference in opinion on EVP priorities. While IT, HR, Science
and General Management see The leadership listening to employees’ opinions when making decisions as their
priority, personal interest in the responsibilities of the role is the most important aspect for those working in
Marketing, HR, Engineering and Sales. IT, along with Finance, also seework/life balance as an EVP priority, Legal
identify The person to whom you report as the most important consideration. Legal also highly rate and give equal im-
portance to The leadership listening to employees’ opinions, personal interest in the responsibilities of the role and
work/life balance.
Half of all industry segments select personal interest in the responsibilities of the role as the first choice EVP attribute
under the role heading, including FMCG, Insurance, Distribution/Logistics, IT, Charity/Voluntary, Public Sector,
Engineering/Construction, Energy/Environmental, Media and Retail.Work/life balance is the highest factor for
Financial Services, Healthcare, Tourism/Hospitality and Media, Consultancy, Professional Services, Telecoms and
Education.While Call Centre’s first preference is The location of where the role is based, The person to whom you
report to is the most important EVP aspect for respondents in Consultancy, Professional Services, Telecoms and
Education. Somewhat ironically, the lowest rating by any segment of any EVP element under this heading was for The
opportunity to travel as part of your role, given by Tourism/Hospitality.
changingfaces?Interim & Contract
Professionals from HRM
HRM_EVP_Survey.qxp:Layout 1 22/02/2012 17:24 Page 17
d u r i n g a h i r i n g p r o c e s s
18
If you want to hire great talent at any level, make sure the interviewers are up for the experience of the process. The
Rapport between a potential recruit and the hiring manager is the most significant factor for candidates in judging
their experience during the recruitment process with you. Do you or your hiring managers consistently show genuine
interest throughout each recruitment process? This is the second most decisive factor in the recruitment process
overall and for each Career Level individually. Candidates who you do not ultimately want to hire, may well know and
have influence with the person you wish to recruit.
Analysis by Gender supports this, with male and female respondents both agreeing with the overall response, as they
do in their third most significant factor, Timely communication throughout the recruitment process.
Review by Function also supports this analysis, with the exception of Marketing professionals who see Being met by a
relevant senior executive at the first meeting as highly influential in their perspective of your organisation.
Analysis by Segment also supports the top three choices of Rapport, Interest shown and Timely communicationwith
some variation in the first three places order. Respondents in Telecoms all gave these factors maximum rating, leading
some of the very few 100% ratings of any attribute under any heading throughout the survey.
A positive and friendly greeting by thereceptionist on your arrival for interview.
The interview being held at the timeagreed and without delay.
The interview process being describedclearly to you from the outset.
Being met by a relevant senior executiveat the first meeting.
The rapport between you and your likelynewmanager.
Timely communication throughout therecruitment process.
The level of interest shown at interview bythe interviewers.
company functional senior middle specialist or responsedirector head manager manager stand alone totals
professional
1.65 1.76 1.74 1.78 1.86 1.8
2.23 2.1 2.13 2.09 2.14 2.12
2.38 2.33 2.2 2.28 2.29 2.28
2.54 2.52 2.5 2.31 2.22 2.34
2.92 2.85 2.85 2.84 2.79 2.83
2.46 2.6 2.56 2.59 2.6 2.58
2.87 2.8 2.84 2.82 2.76 2.8
Finally, when interviewing for a position, which of the following would impact your
decision to accept a new job and by what extent?6
• under hiring process, level of rapport between the candidate and the hiring manager is the highestevp element - this factor has the highest endorsement of all evp items in the survey
• interest shown is the second highest factor here and the second highest of all evp survey elements
hrm employee value proposition | report 2012
HRM_EVP_Survey.qxp:Layout 1 22/02/2012 17:24 Page 18
s u m m a r y
hrm employee value proposition | report 2012
19
The complexity of reviewing and putting these survey results together, served as an overall reminder to us how
complex EVP is to implement effectively. Every organisation must measure for itself on a regular basis, what
employees really want, to ensure a fit with what the organisation offers and therefore a sustainable EVP.While there
are some similarities in the responses given by the different groupings used in this research, beneath the surface of
the top responses, variation increases significantly, therefore broad sweeping, one size fits all EVP elements will just
not work. Understanding the differences, is as important as understanding the needs.
Full and consistent communication to your employees as to what the deal is, is fundamental to making the deal work.
So often in organisations, the absence of communication creates an unnecessary void, filled by unhelpful negative
assumptions. Ensure that everyone is aware of what your deal offers, what attributes your organisation possesses and
therefore what differentiates you as an employer. In this way, current employees may stay with you, while future ones
will target your business.
EVP is a long term policy and commitment, which means your organisation must keep one eye on current needs and
another on the future. Anticipating these and being able to adapt is core to getting a consistently positive message
about the organisation to the internal and external labour pools. Having come to terms with Generation Y in the last
number of years, we now have to understand what Generation Z (also known as Generation M, for Multi- tasking) are
seeking. At the same time we now need to learn what Generation G (the gamers), for whom the world appears to be
too slow, expect from their employment relationships. And then there’s Generation E (Einstein - not Emigration!). This
group are the confident, self-assured youth for whom Respect, Honour and Authenticity are primary values. They want
you to tell them “What is the meaning of this organisation for which I work?” and “Why is this in any way important?”
Now there’s a thought...
GrahamMorris
Managing Director
HRM Recruitment Group
Contingency & Retained Search, Contract & InterimSelection through 3 Practice Areas:
professional services groupscience & technology groupcommercial & support group
p: (+353 1) 632 1800 | e: [email protected] | www.hrm.ie
perfection
HRM_EVP_Survey.qxp:Layout 1 22/02/2012 17:24 Page 19
HRM Recruitment Group,
47 Fitzwilliam Square, Dublin 2.
p: (+353 1) 632 1800
www.hrm.ie
HRM_EVP_Survey.qxp:Layout 1 22/02/2012 17:24 Page 20
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