Using Corporate Giving Programs To Drive Employee Recruitment

By Sebastian Troup


If there is one thing that today's working is struggling to balance it would be - that ability to make a living even with an unpredictable economy while maintaining that fervent desire to find a deeper meaning which goes beyond the "paycheck" in their work by desiring to do good deeds.

Employers are likewise balancing priorities: While maintaining a sustainable level of profit is as important as ever for business growth and prosperity, public and business leaders alike feel that companies have a moral obligation to give back to the communities that create their profit.

The good thing is that such goals are not limited to just themselves. Both acts can actually complement one another through that leveraging of power via corporate giving programs wherein it is found effective in causing employee recruitment.

According to studies, employees these days actually come with priorities differently defined compared to those of the previous years. Today, many employees are not solely after getting paid really well or in getting excellent benefits package because they are now keen to what kind of culture the workplace of their prospective company of employment possesses. What they want to determine is how high they can be given by the company in terms of autonomy and empowerment as well as whether they share mutual missions and values with the company.

Bearing in mind those things, several job seekers particularly Millennials fresh out of college bearing technical knowledge that is highly preferred are actually choosing employers with socially active mindsets who are able to show commitment to causes over offers of slightly higher wages.

A healthy employee volunteer program that provides paid time off to volunteer for causes in the local community can be very attractive to a potential employee who is already committed to volunteering or charitable giving in some way.

The same thing goes to employees who are amenable to committing to a worthy cause but are not up for budgeting out the money themselves may find a simple payroll deduction arrangement splendid and may be appealing to potential employees willing to do good however without the need to sacrifice a huge amount of time to commit.

Obviously, no level of corporate giving can make up for a compensation package which is out of line with industry norms. But if your organization offers a competitive salary and benefits package, you can create a powerful differentiating factor by establishing and promoting a strong, strategic corporate philanthropy program that heavily involves your employees.

More potential employees are attracted to companies with positive reputes which consequently enable the company to be with more choices for the best and brightest of those aspiring applicants. It is true that Cause Marketing entices more customers given that positive repute of the company being spread via word-of-mouth or online media.

Know that companies dedicated to make corporate giving programs which involve its employees for the long term will also find themselves with higher levels of employee engagement thus increasing its productivity and profitability.

If a company is able to have a culture of philanthropy, this comes as a highly preferred environment amongst new recruits as they can join and start immediately with committing to the organization which they will see from those who have been there long before them. This appears to be self-replicating and of a synergistic pattern proving to only grow more powerful through time.




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