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  2. Employer branding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employer_branding

    As for consumer brands, most employer brand practitioners and authors argue that effective employer branding and brand management requires a clear Employer Brand proposition, [1] or Employee value proposition. This serves to: define what the organization would most like to be associated with as an employer; highlight the attributes that ...

  3. How to Empower Employees and Build a Great Brand - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2013-05-04-an-interview-with...

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  4. Organizational culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Organizational_culture

    Examples include external/internal, strong/weak, flexible/rigid, and many others. ... employees, work and customers together, improving culture and brand. [94]

  5. Employee value proposition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Employee_value_proposition

    An organization benefits from a well-formed EVP because it attracts and retains key talent, helps prioritize the HR agenda, creates a strong people brand, helps re-engage a disenchanted workforce, and reduces hire premiums. [9] Only if the EVP of an organization matches what someone values in their work is there a win-win situation.

  6. How the CEO of a women’s wear brand reinvented the ‘new ...

    www.aol.com/finance/ceo-womenswear-brand...

    “Crack the code. Take the stage. Rewrite the rules.” The inspirational words run across the wall of M.M.LaFleur’s Upper West Side retail store, overlooking light-wash wood floors, a warm ...

  7. Brand engagement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brand_engagement

    An example of measuring brand engagement is the service-profit chain, a statistical model that tracks increases in employee “engagement drivers” to correlated increases in customer satisfaction and loyalty, and then correlates this to increases in total shareholder return (TSR), revenue and other financial performance measures.

  8. Corporate branding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_branding

    In marketing, corporate branding refers to the practice of promoting the brand name of a corporate entity, as opposed to specific products or services. The activities and thinking that go into corporate branding are different from product and service branding because the scope of a corporate brand is typically much broader. Although corporate ...

  9. Corporate identity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_identity

    Corporate identity is the set of multi-sensory elements that marketers employ to communicate a visual statement about the brand to consumers. [2] These multi-sensory elements include but are not limited to company name, logo, slogan, buildings, décor, uniforms, company colors and in some cases, even the physical appearance of customer-facing employees. [3]