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Personalization isn’t just a buzzword—it’s the spark that creates real connections and drives meaning at work. But as organizations expand, delivering experiences that resonate across roles and geographies—while maintaining ROI and a unified culture—can seem daunting. At the recent Bright Conference, leaders from Genuine Parts Company, Indeed, and Equifax tackled these challenges head-on, sharing hard-won insights and practical wisdom.
Panel speakers included:
Each shared their unique perspectives, successes, and challenges. Let’s unpack the essential themes shaping the future of employee experience, now enriched with candid perspectives and real-world quotes from the panel. Watch the on-demand recording.
The panelists began by introducing their organizations and the diverse employee bases they serve:
Modern employees crave more than one-size-fits-all messaging. They want platforms that deliver what matters, when it matters—and they notice when it misses the mark. Lisa Rogers from Indeed captured this challenge, saying, “At a size of 15,000 employees, you can get a lot of noise. Personalization helps cut through that noise and deliver what employees need to know to do their jobs.”
Knowing your people is the foundation. Katie Hardy of Genuine Parts Company described their approach: “Our challenge is finding a way to engage both office-based employees and those in distribution centers or on the road.” For GPC, over 70% of the workforce doesn’t have email. That shaped a content strategy prioritizing pay, benefits, and critical updates across every channel—building trust by meeting employees where they are.
Dan Lach from Equifax broke down their layered solution: “We put enterprise-wide news at the top, business unit updates next, and finally individualized content—so employees see their name and what’s relevant to them. That simple change, just adding ‘Hi [Name]’ to the homepage, made a surprising impact.”
When it comes to employee intranets, the panel agrees that it must be well-organized in order to be useful. Great personalization leans on smart, not sprawling, metadata. The panel agreed: simple beats complex. “We started with 50-60 metadata tags and had to cut that in half,” Dan admitted. “It’s about finding the balance between specificity and simplicity.”
Lisa explained how Indeed keeps things manageable: “For us, it was an exercise and less is more. Do we really need medical, dental, vision, or can we just have a benefits category?” Integration with HR systems like Workday and Okta allows for efficient segmentation without piling on layers of complexity.
Katie added that keeping metadata evergreen is vital: “It has to be as evergreen as possible. If it changes every time we have a new leader or project, it quickly becomes unmanageable.”
And transparency matters. “At Indeed, all content is visible unless there’s a reason to restrict it,” Lisa said. “That way, search becomes powerful and nobody’s left out of the loop.”
Segmented communication is powerful, but too much fragmentation can erode unity. Dan cited their thoughtful structure: “We make sure everyone gets enterprise news first, then business unit updates, then personal interest content. That way, people stay connected to the bigger picture.”
Leadership involvement is a difference-maker. Lisa shared, “Our CEO frequently tells people at town halls, ‘Check Huddl for more information.’ When leaders validate the platform, credibility skyrockets.” Employee spotlights and authentic stories also build belonging—Katie noted that these human stories consistently drive higher engagement than generic updates.
Personalization thrives when it keeps evolving. The panelists were clear: analytics should support decisions, not just measure them. “Data is just numbers unless you turn it into actionable insights,” Lisa said. “Make the data tell a story, so it actually changes what you do next.”
GPC, for example, tracks time spent and pages visited, aiming for just-right engagement—enough to get what’s needed, but not so much that employees lose time. “If an hourly worker’s in for fifteen minutes, we know something’s off,” Katie explained.
Personalizing the employee journey is an ongoing act of listening, learning, and adjusting. When technology, data, and empathy work together, organizations not only engage employees—they build a stronger sense of belonging and shared purpose. As these leaders revealed, success comes from making every digital interaction feel personal, meaningful, and connected to something bigger.
How is your organization bringing personalization to life? What’s working—and where could you streamline or connect more deeply?