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25 Questions That Expose Employer Brand Fluff in 10 Minutes

February 25, 2026

If employer branding had a smoke alarm, these would be the batteries.

Because “fluff” is not a moral failure. It’s a conversion failure.

Run these questions against your career site, Built In profile, job descriptions, and recruiter outreach. If you can’t answer in plain English, your candidate is doing unpaid detective work.

They will choose someone else.

The list

  1. What’s the one reason the right person chooses you over a known brand?
  2. What do you offer that competitors can’t copy in 90 days?
  3. What’s the tradeoff of working here?
  4. What does success look like in this role in 90 days?
  5. What makes people say yes to your offer, specifically?
  6. What makes people say no, honestly?
  7. What’s the hardest part of the job that nobody admits?
  8. Who thrives here? Who struggles?
  9. How do decisions get made?
  10. What moves fast here, and what moves slow?
  11. What does flexibility mean in practice?
  12. What do managers do here that’s meaningfully different?
  13. What do you not tolerate?
  14. Where do you invest, even when budgets tighten?
  15. What do you measure internally that employees actually feel?
  16. What do people get access to here that they won’t elsewhere?
  17. How do you handle workload spikes?
  18. What does onboarding look like week 1 and week 4?
  19. What’s your compensation philosophy, not your benefits list?
  20. Where does your process waste candidate time?
  21. Why do your best employees stay?
  22. Why do good employees leave?
  23. What proof do you have for your biggest claim?
  24. If your careers page vanished, what would recruiters say in 30 seconds?
  25. If a skeptical candidate asked “why should I believe you,” what would you show?

How to use this without starting a civil war

Pick one role family. Answer the questions with the people closest to the work: hiring managers, recruiters, and one or two high-performing employees.

Then do the adult thing most employer brand work avoids:

choose a wedge.

Not 12 values. Not a paragraph. One differentiated reason to pick you, supported by proof.

If you like the “audit then act” approach, it’s central to the EBOS process.

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