Creating an Employee Referral Culture, Not Just A Program

Creating an Employee Referral Culture, Not Just A Program

Tiffany Jin
Co-Founder
February 26, 2025
Blog
2 min read
What is a company's culture?
Company culture is the shared values, behaviors, and practices that define an organization's personality. It's how people feel about their work and the company's direction.

Creating an Employee Referral Culture, Not just program

A strong referral program isn’t just a hiring tool—it’s a way to build a culture where employees feel invested in shaping their team. Here’s how to create a workplace where referrals become second nature:

1. Align Referrals to Company Values from the Top

If leadership doesn’t champion referrals, employees won’t either. Make it clear that hiring through referrals is a strategic priority, not just an HR initiative.

How to execute

Have leaders consistently reinforce the importance of referrals in All Hands meetings, onboarding sessions, and leadership gatherings. Set a clear goal, like “We want 30% of our hires to come from referrals because we trust you to help build the best team.”

Example

One client’s CEO personally welcomes every new hire class and always highlights the referral program. This repeated messaging has led to a steady increase in participation.

2. Recognize and Celebrate Referrers

Employees who help build the team should be publicly celebrated.

How to execute

Feature top referrers in town halls, newsletters, and internal communication channels. Shout outs from leadership to show appreciation.

Example

A talent acquisition leader at one company sends personal thank-you emails and coffee gift cards to top referrers each quarter. Another client announces their top referrers in company-wide newsletters, making them feel like company influencers.

3. Non-Monetary Rewards & Sweepstakes

Referral bonuses are great, but gamification keeps things exciting and encourages ongoing participation.

How to execute

Run quarterly referral contests with prizes beyond cash—think points for an employee reward marketplace, branded company merch, smartwatches, gift cards, or sports tickets.

Example

A few clients of ours offer quarterly prizes for the top three referrers, allowing them to pick from a list of exciting rewards. They refresh the prizes every quarter and make it seasonal (ie. during summer seasons, it was a YETI cooler). 

4. Creative Timely Messaging

Keeping referral promotions fun and fresh prevents employees from tuning them out.

How to execute

Align referral campaigns with seasonal events and playful messaging to make them more engaging.

Example

A healthcare client ran a Thanksgiving-themed campaign asking, "Who are you thankful to have worked with before?" 

Another company sent out a Valentine’s Day referral message:
"Hi {{first_name}}, Cupid called last week! He said your friend would be a perfect fit for our team. Hook us up with them, and we'll share the love with a sweet bonus!"

5. Think Outside the Box – Make Referrals an Interactive Experience

Referrals don’t have to be limited to submitting names—they can be part of events and experiences.

How to execute

Extend referrals to hiring events, company happy hours, or networking meetups. Offer incentives for bringing friends who are a great fit.

Examples

One client offers referral bonuses for employees who bring a friend to a hiring event—if that friend gets hired, they receive a bonus. Another client hosts monthly happy hours where employees can bring a referral for a $50 gift card, in addition to their referral bonus if the person is hired.

By embedding referrals into company culture—not just as a program, but as a way employees help shape their workplace—you’ll build a team that grows through trust, engagement, and shared values.

See why leading organizations are using Eqo to maximize their employee referrals.

Eqo - Employee Referral Tool
0%
100%