The three-step method for designing a relevant and differentiated EVP 

   
   
Improving the employee experience (EX) and employee value proposition (EVP) is the number-one priority for HR, largely driven by employees’ changing views on work and the need for human-centricity.1

An EVP that effectively attracts and retains talent remains essential, even with the beginning of a slow-down in job vacancies in the euro area and the US.2,3 Yet, according to our 2024 People Risk Report, only 30% of companies have a clearly defined EVP in place.4

As businesses chase productivity gains, they’ll need to find new ways to motivate employees — not just to stay loyal, but also to go the extra mile to meet growth targets. These goals will be met, in part, by the promise of AI, with most executives anticipating productivity gains of 10%–30%.5 Those gains could involve more sophisticated workforce planning and career management, offering a chance to improve efficiency. AI can also create curated employee growth opportunities to boost engagement, but with engagement scores declining since 2020, getting the workforce to adopt the new technology and integrate it into their work habits will be no easy feat.6

The employee perspectives shaping the EVP:

  • Employees seek more growth opportunities
    AI can help to curate this experience, but employees need assurances that there will be opportunities to upskill, reskill and continuously learn for their future employability. 
  • Employee sentiment toward flexibility, job security and fair pay is evolving
    AI is improving data insights to help employers better understand employee expectations. It can also play a role in improving the EX and activating the deal.

For the EVP to play its part in driving productivity, the initial promise to candidates and employees needs to go beyond employer branding and be followed by consistent practice that’s authentic to the organisation and its values while remaining affordable and sustainable to the company. Meanwhile, the EVP has to speak not just to what the workforce wants and needs today, but also to what’s needed for them to thrive in the long term. When the EVP acts as a foundational framework for talent management initiatives, projects can then be more easily governed and measured. At a time when all eyes are on ROI, metrics will help businesses direct their investments appropriately. All this sets a high bar when EVP affordability and sustainability are in the spotlight.

So how can you refresh your EVP so it remains relevant and differentiated and energises candidates and current employees — while making your budget stretch?

Here are three practical steps:

Despite 47% of employers actively investing in employee listening, 42% of workers say their employers aren’t meeting their needs (an increase from 19% in 2022).7 For those employers that are already listening, what are they missing? And for those that aren’t, how do they build a strategy that tunes in to employee needs?

Societal changes (including globalisation, personalisation, and an increasing focus on inclusion, well-being and sustainability) mean aspects of the EVP are changing faster than ever. Refreshing the EVP to stay relevant to candidates and employees while balancing the needs of all stakeholders is key. To achieve this, start with active listening. Internally, tried-and-tested employee listening tools, such as conjoint analysis and preference surveys, are still useful for getting to the heart of tangible benefits like pay or flexibility. 

But it’s coupling this with employee behaviour analysis that truly helps companies understand what matters to people. Behavioural analysis may encompass the benefits employees use or data surrounding progression, leave, and absenteeism. Employee listening and behavioural analysis are two sides of the same coin; the former tells us what an employee says, the latter what they actually do (also known as the say-do gap). For example, two in five employees say designing work with well-being in mind is the best way to support their well-being.8 Yet only 16% say they stay with their employers because of the well-being initiatives on offer.9 Being mindful of the say-do gap means HR leaders can target their spend toward strategic solutions.

Addressing the say-do gap for the intangible parts of the EVP can be more challenging, but it’s these elements that differentiate an employer from competitors. Efficient tools such as digital focus groups  can help you get deeper insights and synthesise them quickly. The opinions of recruiters and candidates can also be an important data point for understanding perceptions of your business. For example, you can test perceptions regarding culture, how connected people feel to the organisation and to their teams, and how purpose is felt internally and expressed externally. 

Combine these tools with the right listening strategy  that encompasses when, where and how to listen — and what to listen for. Strategic listening is also more accessible today given improved access to data, people analytics and new AI-driven capabilities. Together, these tools can help you address the say-do gap and stay ahead in your efforts to respond to employees’ needs. Keep your approaches targeted by focusing on key moments that matter within the employee journey — those moments that have the biggest influence over how a person feels about their employer. It’s crucial that companies see the EVP as a lever for real organisational development, not just as a communication or employer brand tool.

To avoid negative social media attention and create stronger connections with candidates and employees, employers need to go beyond just “window dressing.” It can be tempting to craft messages that meet most employees’ needs, but if this is misaligned with business strategy and isn’t felt in the day-to-day employee experience, it will hurt buy-in. Likewise, if the EVP is overly ambitious in comparison to today’s realities, it may feel inauthentic to candidates and employees.

Activating the EVP is an important step. To achieve this, ensure that leader/manager messages and behaviour align with the values that underpin the EVP (for example, diversity and inclusion, growth and mobility, etc.) and that HR programmes and policies align with it. Some things are relatively simple to change, such as improving benefits policies. Others, such as improving career progression and internal mobility or redesigning work to improve work-life balance, may require longer change efforts and greater investment.

One challenge will be targeting limited budgets. Co-creating how the EVP is lived at key moments that matter helps you prioritise investments, adapt value messages to key talent segments and design an experience that feels connected. Establishing design workshops that tackle EVP gaps and break down HR silos will mean a more holistic experience. When done right, this will take time, but it’s well worth the investment. However, it’s also important that the improvements be communicated continually — both internally (change management) and externally (employer branding) — otherwise, the best ideas will fall flat.

Compared to their low-growth peers, high-growth companies10 are:

1.4 times more likely to define and redesign “moments that matter”11

A robust EVP helps companies drive business outcomes, improve recruiting, increase engagement (through reduced absence and improved productivity), retain talent and build brand awareness. Ultimately, it’s important to do this affordably while getting the best from your people day in and day out.

To hold the business accountable, the EVP should be linked to clear metrics. This is a historical challenge, and common pitfalls remain:

  • After using metrics to create the business case for investment, longer-term measurement and governance fall down.
  • Metrics aren’t linked to the goals of the initial project or the business.

A framework for defining EVP metrics

Tackle the aforementioned challenges head-on with a dedicated EVP metric framework:
   
The employee value proposition metric starts with starts with priority goals, then looks at the impact of the holistic EVP, and finally the effectiveness of each key EVP component.
  1. Measuring the impact of the holistic EVP
    Ensure metrics are linked to priority goals for the EVP. For example, the goal of talent attraction can be measured through time-to-hire and the quota of suitable applications, whereas retention may turn to net promotor scores and Glassdoor reviews. To complement this, stay tuned in to employee reactions with continuous listening to ensure your actions leave them feeling better supported in the moments that matter. In addition to traditional attraction and retention ratios, consider metrics such as cost per head, benchmarking costs against the market, and equity analytics like pay and promotion.
  2. Measuring the effectiveness of each key EVP component and the moments that matter
    Understand the attractiveness of benefits through utilisation rates, career progression rates or capability building. This can ensure that investments in HR programmes and policies follow the EVP framework and that gaps are closed. It’s more challenging to connect the intangible with a specific intervention; for example, is your improved talent attraction due to a refreshed EVP or changes in the talent market?
Ensuring these metrics are linked to business goals and executive scorecards can be a powerful tool for change. For example, with 82% of employees feeling at risk of burnout, the EVP can address this through the well-being programmes that form part of the deal.12
In high-growth companies, health and well-being metrics are more likely to appear on executive scorecards than more traditional human capital metrics such as employee turnover (50% and 26%, respectively). 13

Measure the effectiveness of the EVP, and tweak the employee experience as you experiment and gather insights. The prize is a better return on your investment.

Improving the EVP can mean many different things. Refreshing it doesn’t automatically result in improved employee engagement, a stronger candidate pool, retention of top performers, increased employee advocacy or better financial outcomes. For the EVP to effectively drive productivity, it needs to be treated as a strategic framework to ensure its long-term viability. This involves aligning the internal and external aspects of the EVP and ensuring that the promises made are reflected in the actual experiences and consistently upheld. In other words, the inner beauty needs to reflect the outer beauty of the employer brand. Making it real means ensuring that your HR policies and programmes follow suit and that manager and leadership behaviour and culture promote the spirit of the EVP.

If done correctly, refreshing the EVP isn’t just a project. Instead, it’s a continuous improvement process for which the company is responsible and accountable.

After all, an employer’s reputation is difficult to build but easy to lose. In-depth insights and co-creation driven by the real experiences of employees and supported by clear metrics will ensure a truly transformative EVP.

1 Mercer. Global Talent Trends (GTT) Study 2024, available at https://www.mercer.com/insights/people-strategy/future-of-work/global-talent-trends/.

2 Eurostat. “Euro Area Job Vacancy Rate at 2.7%,” March 15, 2024.

3 Wiseman P. “US Job Openings Fall to 8.1 Million, Lowest Since 2021, but Remain at Historically High Levels,” Associated Press, June 4, 2024.

4 Mercer’s 2024 GTT Study.

5 Mercer's 2024 GTT study

6 Mercer’s global normative data.

7 Mercer’s 2024 GTT Study.

8 Mercer’s 2024 GTT Study.

9 Data from Mercer’s 2024 GTT survey.

10 In Mercer’s Global Talent Trends Study 2024, high-growth companies self-reported growth of at least 10% in 2023, whereas low growth companies self-reported less than 3%.

11 Data from Mercer’s 2024 GTT survey.

12 Mercer’s 2024 GTT Study.

13 Data from Mercer’s 2024 GTT survey.

About the author(s)
Queenie Chan

Principal, Employee Experience Solution Design Lead, Mercer

Michael Eger

Partner at Mercer

David Wreford

Partner, Mercer

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