[MUSIC] Now when it comes to the final of the six As, adherence, one of the key aspects is the rewards you get, the consequences. Do we reward their behavior? Is there feedback in some sense? Now, lots can be said about the feedback, what's critical is to think about the feedback not just in terms of the overall goal, maybe customer satisfaction or the brand image we build, but to think about it specifically in terms of well, what are my actions that add up to that feedback. So, if you are in a call center, how are you rewarding people based on that? Maybe it's how many calls are resolved the first time the customer calls. You can think of specific metrics for the different functions. So it's aligning these incentives. Now, when it comes to true change process, people say that change always feels like failure in the middle. We talk about celebrating things like quick wins. Can you have easily achievable goals that you can celebrate, move on and build upon? Well, we often have lots of quick losses as well and we have to be quite careful about how demotivating those can be. So what we really want to do is, going back to the actions, we want to reward the behavior, not the outcome. Coming back to Simmon, they were very clever about aligning, kind of, the rewards with the behaviors, they actually gave the staff to choose. They could design their own balanced scorecard. Five performance-based metrics. They could design what they wanted to achieve at the end of the day. They also made sure that they actually measured the brand change they wanted to achieve with the customers. All too often, our brand strategy actually sits quite separate from our measurement system. Now, the final thing, because this is about brands after all. Think about also branding. Some of these processes. So in terms of adherence, I've mentioned Tesco a few times during this mook, the UK and now worldwide retailer, they've a simple mantra in the organization. It's called better, simpler, cheaper, in that order. Meaning better for the customers, simpler for employees, cheaper for operations. All are important, but the customer comes first. So whenever there's a decision to be made, and decisions rarely have an obvious answer, otherwise they wouldn't be decisions, keep in mind which one comes first. At Southwest Airlines, which I mentioned in this module, they abide by the golden rule. Do unto others as you want them to do to you. If you think about Disney, we also brand certain things. Again, a company I mentioned during the mook, we call the staff members in the parks, in the amusement parks, we call them cast members, and their on stage. So we're kind of branding their jobs, so they behave in a certain way. Think about what would happen if you called your factory workers not factory workers, but if you called them inventors. Maybe they'll start becoming more creative just by the label you gave them. Labels can be very very powerful in driving people's behavior. And finally, in terms of adherence, going back to some of the practices we talk about in a different video. It's not just about the Six As, it's also about changing HR practices. Over time, they also had different types of hiring ads. Not only did they change their advertising to the consumers, they also had sort of more on-brand ads in terms of hiring, the whole internet changed, the whole support systems for the staff changed, in terms of reward, recognition, communications, hiring, training, and so forth. So the practices, obviously supported, and were part of the brand engagement, in terms of the six As process. So hope it's intuitive, this idea of the six As process. I hope you buy into the necessity for this to happen. And hopefully, it will also motivate you to think about HR marketing working in unison towards a common goal. And I want to end this film with two words really. One is the word hypocrite, you've probably heard that word before, and if you look up the dictionary definition of what a hypocrite is, it's really when you think about where people's espoused principles about what they say they believed differs from what they do, from their actions. That's really the core of the definition of a hypocrite. And when we think of the word integrity which is probably and for many of us, it is one of our company values, it's really the consistency of principals and actions. So the six As process ultimately really is about integrity. Integrity in your HR functions. Integrity in your brand. Living the brand from the inside out. And that's an ongoing process. [MUSIC]