We studied 13 modern recruitment marketing practices that give employers an edge in finding and attracting their target candidate personas, engaging passive talent on social and mobile, and nurturing leads and converting them into qualified applicants.
Here’s what we found; how does your organization compare?
The report found that 27 percent (134 companies on the 2015 Fortune 500 list) earned an “A” or “B” for their use of recruitment marketing, giving them an edge in the competition for talent due to their use of:
Overall, this year’s Fortune 500 class earned a “C” average, with a score of 9.86. As a group, their use of recruiting marketing practices is “good;” however, those that scored As and Bs do so by featuring targeted messaging by candidate persona on their career sites, providing a mobile-friendly candidate experience, using career-specific social channels, and using talent network forms to capture leads before they’re ready to apply.
Top marks go to 13 companies (3 percent) that scored an “A,” earning a spot on the report’s “Dean’s List.” Four companies earned nearly perfect scores with 23 out of 25 points:
| Company Name | Grade | Score | Fortune Rank |
| Express Scripts | A | 23 | 22 |
| Johnson & Johnson | A | 23 | 37 |
| General Mills | A | 23 | 171 |
| Kelly Services | A | 23 | 471 |
| AT&T | A | 22 | 12 |
| Comcast | A | 22 | 43 |
| UPS | A | 22 | 47 |
| Allstate | A | 22 | 89 |
| CDW | A | 22 | 253 |
| Hilton Worldwide Holdings | A | 22 | 280 |
| Stryker | A | 22 | 300 |
| Xcel Energy | A | 21 | 255 |
| Expedia | A | 21 | 458 |
There’s a lot that talent acquisition teams can learn from how the 2015 Fortune 500 are using best-practice marketing principles in recruiting. Some recruitment marketing practices are adopted by half or more companies and therefore considered best practices; other tactics are used by a third of companies and therefore deemed emerging practices; and some practices are largely untapped. Which practices are you using?
Check out the complete report below or here.