The Talent Attraction Secret Nobody Talks About

Here’s what I’ve observed. Companies doing the most sophisticated things to win on talent attraction aren’t talking about compensation. They aren’t talking about perks. They’re talking about structure. I’ve spent years reviewing LOWI data, conducting certification interviews, and working directly with CHROs at some of the most recognized employers in the world. The organizations that […]

The Talent Attraction Secret Nobody Talks About

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Here’s what I’ve observed.

Companies doing the most sophisticated things to win on talent attraction aren’t talking about compensation. They aren’t talking about perks. They’re talking about structure.

I’ve spent years reviewing LOWI data, conducting certification interviews, and working directly with CHROs at some of the most recognized employers in the world. The organizations that consistently attract the candidates everyone else cannot reach share three operational decisions. None of them are visible on a careers page. All of them show up in the survey data.

The first is structured leadership accessibility.

Not an open-door policy. An actual mechanism. Calendared. Documented. Responded to. The difference between a policy and a mechanism is the difference between an aspiration and an operating condition. Candidates research this. Not explicitly. But they feel its absence in third-party employer reviews. They feel its presence in how quickly their questions are answered during an interview process. The companies with actual mechanisms have a different energy in candidate conversations. I’ve seen it consistently.

The second is skills investment designed for portability.

This is the one that surprises people. The counterintuitive finding in our data is that investing in skills employees could use anywhere, at a competitor, at a startup, anywhere, retains talent better than investing in proprietary skills that only work here. The logic is straightforward once you see it. If an employee is growing in capabilities the whole market values, their current company is their best option as long as that growth continues. The moment the growth stops, they start testing the market. I’ve seen this play out specifically in industrial manufacturing, where the conventional wisdom is to compete on stability and pay. The organizations in our data that shifted that value proposition to development built employer brands that attract skilled workers their competitors cannot touch.

The third is values attached to consequences.

Every company has values. Almost nobody attaches them to anything that matters. Here’s what that means in practice: the language a company uses in its hiring conversation should appear verbatim in the performance review document. Not approximately. Not conceptually. Verbatim.

When those two documents use the same language, employees experience the organization as coherent. When they use different language, employees experience a gap between what was promised and what is measured. That gap is one of the primary predictors of departure in our LOWI data.

Skilled workers, the people every company is fighting to attract right now, are experienced enough to detect this incoherence quickly. They’ve often worked at companies where the values on the wall had nothing to do with how decisions were made.

Dalkia Energy Solutions is a certified Most Loved Workplace® in the construction and energy sector, where culture is rarely the competitive differentiator. The safety and service values communicated in the hiring process appear in the same language used in performance evaluations. Employees don’t experience a gap between what Dalkia said it stood for and what it actually measures. 

The talent shortage is real. But it’s also an opportunity. The companies that build these three operational conditions are going to win on talent attraction not just in this cycle but in every cycle. Because these practices produce emotional connectedness. And emotional connectedness is what makes people choose a company, stay at a company, and bring others with them.

Based on Best Practice Institute research, the organizations that build loved cultures see 48% lower turnover and consistently out-innovate their competitors.

That isn’t accidental. That is intentional design.

The leaders behind the organizations that demonstrate these practices will be speaking at the Global 100 Most Loved Workplaces® Summit. This is the conversation you need to be in if you are a CHRO navigating the talent shortage right now.

Register for the Summit at mostlovedworkplace.com/summit


What do companies that win on talent attraction do differently?

The companies that consistently attract the candidates everyone else cannot reach share three operational practices: structured leadership accessibility through formal mechanisms, skills investment designed for portability, and values attached to performance consequences.

Why does investing in portable skills retain employees better?

When a company invests in skills an employee could use anywhere, it signals that the organization values the employee’s development. Employees growing in transferable capabilities stay because their current environment is the most accelerated path available. The moment growth stops, they test the market.

How does Most Loved Workplace® certification relate to talent attraction?

Most Loved Workplace® certification independently verifies that the cultural practices candidates care about are real, not claimed. Candidates researching employers before applying find third-party evidence rather than self-reported descriptions.

Ready to Build a Loved Workplace?

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Frequently Asked Questions

The biggest large employer culture challenges during a spinout or major transformation include: maintaining consistent culture signals across geographically dispersed teams, preventing a vacuum of identity when the legacy brand disappears, and preserving the informal trust networks that made the old organization function. Companies like Kyndryl, which spun out of IBM with 73,000 employees across 5 continents, show that culture infrastructure—systematic onboarding, explicit values, leadership accessibility—must be deliberately built, not assumed to transfer.

Maintaining consistent culture across global offices requires moving from aspirational values to operational infrastructure. The evidence from Kyndryl's Most Loved Workplace certification shows that when employees in Asia Pacific, Europe, North America, South America, and the UK independently describe their culture using the same language—'flexible work,' 'you are heard,' 'career and learning outcomes'—it is not coincidence. It is the result of systematic design: shared onboarding, visible leadership behavior, and consistent feedback loops that translate values into daily experience regardless of location or time zone.

A Most Loved Workplace® certification proves that a company's culture claims are independently verified through employee assessment—not self-reported surveys or marketing copy. The certification uses machine learning to analyze sentiment, emotion, and recurring themes across thousands of employee responses. When a large employer like Kyndryl earns this certification despite a major transformation, it demonstrates that their culture infrastructure survived and scaled through disruption, which is the hardest test any organizational culture can face.

About Louis Carter

Louis Carter is the Founder and CEO of Best Practice Institute (BPI) and Most Loved Workplaces®, a global research and certification organization helping companies build workplaces employees love. He is the creator of the Love of Workplace Index™, a research-based framework used to measure emotional connection between employees and their organizations and predict performance, retention, and culture outcomes. Carter is the author of more than a dozen books on leadership, talent development, and management best practices and has advised Fortune 500 companies, government agencies, and global organizations on leadership and culture transformation. He also hosted the Leader Show, a leadership interview series featured on Newsweek for five years, interviewing executives and leadership experts about leadership and the future of work. His work on workplace culture and leadership has been featured in major publications including Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, and The Economist. Learn more in “How Louis Carter’s Most Loved Workplace Measures What Really Matters” (New York Business Now) and “Beyond Employer Branding: How Louis Carter Built the Global Standard for Workplace Culture” (NY Tech Media)

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