★ ★ ★ ★ ★
GLOBAL AUTHORITY For Workplace CULTURE
The Gold Standard for Top Employer
Based on Transparent Criteria & Scientific Method | Attract more applications | Boost employee satisfaction | Strengthen your employer brand
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
For Workplace Excellence in the US
The Gold Standard
for Top Employer
Earn an independent Top Employer certificate and prove your company is a trusted, people‑first workplace. Attract more applications | Boost employee satisfaction | Strengthen your employer brand.
As Featured In
Recognised by over 450 news sites and leading business publications worldwide






















750+
Certified
Employers
94+
Employee
Satisfaction Lift
8
Countries
Represented
2.4×
Higher Applicant
Quality
Our Methodology
Why Become Top Employer?
Why become Top Employer?
In a competitive hiring market, the Top Employer certificate helps your company stand out as a trusted and attractive employer. It strengthens your employer brand, supports better recruitment, and gives you structured insight into employee satisfaction.
PILLAR 1
More applications
A strong Top Employer seal can increase applications by up to 15% (source) by making your company more visible and attractive to qualified candidates.
PILLAR 2
Satisfied employees
Top Employers typically see employee satisfaction increase by up to 11% on average through the insights gained from the certification process.
PILLAR 3
Measurable Insights
Our certification process combines an HR interview and employee survey to provide measurable results and a clear view of your workplace strengths.
How It Works
The Certification Journey
The Certification Journey
From application to issued certificate in 3 to 4 weeks. Every step is structured, transparent and led by our team.
I
Contact
Submit company details and basic workforce data.
II
Application
Application and HR interview by our team of experts.
III
Employee Survey
Anonymous, representative employee survey.
IV
Result & Report
Transparent findings shared with company leadership.
V
Certification
Official seal awarded for 24 months.
Why It Matters
Self-Declared vs Verified
Self-Declared vs Verified
Anyone can claim to be an excellent employer and offer the best place to work. Few can prove it.
Without Certification
Unverified Claim
Self-declared “excellent top employer”
- No external validation
- Inconsistent employee feedback
- Limited applicant trust signal
- Hidden or absent methodology
vs
With Certification
Verified “Top Employer”
- Independently audited credential
- Scientific assessment methodology
Validated employer data
- Recognised seal on careers page
- Published, transparent criteria
Trusted by Industry Leaders
What Our Certified Top Employers Say
What Our Certified Employers Say
Real reviews from HR leaders and executives at certified companies.
4.9 /5
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
BASED ON 187 VERIFIED REVIEWS
TRUSTPILOT
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Help to Attracting Top Talent
We are delighted to have been recognized once again as a top employer… This award helps us in attracting new employees.
Dominic Müller
Managing Director
- VERIFIED REVIEW
FEATURED
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Boosting our Recruitment
We are continuously working to improve our employer benefits and bring about real change. The employer seal helps us in our recruitment efforts.
Simon Rose
- VERIFIED REVIEW
G2
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Communicating Credibly
Employer certifications help us credibly communicate the appeal of our company as an employer
DR. FELIX REICHERT
- VERIFIED REVIEW
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Proud to be a top employer
We are proud to have been recognized as a top employer in the field of interpreting services, and this recognition reaffirms our commitment.
DANIEL NUSCH
CEO
- VERIFIED REVIEW
Trustpilot
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
We were delighted to receive these two awards. The fact that we were rated “very good” twice as a top employer and as a family-friendly employer is important feedback for us.
WALDEMAR DERKSEN
CEO
- VERIFIED REVIEW
G2
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
The survey results provide us with valuable insights into where we are already doing very well and where we can continue to improve. Our goal is to remain a reliable employer in the future as well.
UDO BARON
CEO
- VERIFIED REVIEW
TOP EMPLOYER · 2026
A Credential That Means Something
Top Employer Scientific, Transparent & Reliable
Issued only after independent analysis, employee survey and external validation. The Top Employer Certificate is the proof your culture deserves — recognised globally, displayed proudly. Based on scientific research.
Valid for 24 months
- Digital seal + printable certificate
- Verifiable via public registry
Result of the employee survey
Landing page with your business presentation
Trusted by Top Employers Worldwide
The Top Employer certificate is part of an international network of quality-standard.com. This network uses a consistent, science‑based methodology to certify employers in different countries and industries.
The Directory
Top Employer Around the World
Top Employer Certificates Around the World
The Top Employer certificate is part of an international family of employer seals that are available in multiple countries. This allows companies to use a consistent approach while working with local certification partners.
UNITED STATES
Test
Manufacturing · 2,400 employees
Score
CERTIFICATE
Platinum
The Top Employer certificate helps companies in the US demonstrate workplace excellence and gain visibility in the job market. Certified organizations receive a Top Employer seal and can be listed on external results pages, increasing their reach with potential candidates.
- Germany
Test
Financial Services · 870 employees
Score
91 / 100
CERTIFICATE
Gold
In Germany, the Top Employer seal (“Top Arbeitgeber”) is based on a representative employee survey and a structured HR interview. Companies receive an employer certificate, seal graphics, and a detailed evaluation of employee feedback that they can use to improve working conditions.
GERMANY
Test
Healthcare · 5,100 employees
Score
98 / 100
CERTIFICATE
Platinum
In Austria and Switzerland, related employer certificates follow comparable, standardized criteria. These seals help organizations in those markets communicate their employer quality in a transparent and internationally aligned way.
Trusted by Top Employers Worldwide
The Top Employer certificate is part of an international network of quality standards and employer seals. This network uses a consistent, science‑based methodology to certify employers in different countries and industries.



See What Certified Top Employers Say
Organizations across different industries use the Top Employer Certificate to communicate workplace quality, attract qualified candidates, and gain valuable insights from employee feedback.
“We are delighted to have been recognized once again as a top employer…This award helps us in attracting new employees.”
“We are continuously working to improve our employer benefits and bring about real change. …The employer seal helps us in our recruitment efforts.”
“We are proud to be recognized as a TOP employer in the field of interpreting services and feel affirmed in our commitment.”
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Begin Your Certification
Become a Certified
Top Employer
Become a Certified
Top Employer
Join 500+ leading organisations that have made workplace excellence a measurable, marketable advantage. Apply today and receive your assessment plan within 2 business days.
What Is the Top Employer Certificate?
The Top Employer Certificate is an independent employer seal that confirms your company as a highly recommended place to work. It is awarded through a structured HR interview and a representative employee survey — not subjective ratings or purchased rankings.
Here’s what sets it apart.
How the Top Employer Certification Works?
The Top Employer certification follows a transparent, three‑step process, designed to provide both recognition and actionable insights.
Application & HR Interview
Your company sends basic information and then completes an online HR interview about your benefits, policies, and HR practices. This interview is usually handled by HR or management and takes around one hour, depending on company size.
Representative Employee Survey
All employees receive access to an anonymous, GDPR-compliant survey via personal link or QR code. It measures overall satisfaction and willingness to recommend your company as an employer — with core questions , with questions that can be slightly adapted to your organisation.
Analysis, Rating & Employer Certificate
An independent certification body evaluates both components — each counting 50% — and combines them into an overall score. Companies that achieve a strong result receive the Top Employer certificate and seal for 24 months, along with digital seal graphics, acrylic display stands, and a tabular survey evaluation for internal use.
The certified companies can use Top Employer seal across the website, job postings, social media, and recruitment campaigns — and put it to work where it matters most.
If your overall result isn’t strong enough, you can choose not to use the seal and only pay the survey fee. This is what keeps the Top Employer certificate credible — and why it means something when you display it.
Top Employer Certificates Around the World
The Top Employer certificate is part of an international family of employer seals that are available in multiple countries. This allows companies to use a consistent approach while working with local certification partners.
What You Receive With a Top Employer Certificate?
Certification as a Top Employer includes both marketing assets and practical tools for HR and management.
Professionally designed graphics for digital and print use.
An official document confirming your successful certification.
Detailed insights into employee satisfaction and workplace perceptions.
Optional complimentary press release to help announce your award.
A dedicated online page showcasing your certification and methodology.
Marketing materials that strengthen your reputation as an employer of choice.
Showcase Your Strength as an Employer
The Top Employer Certificate provides credible recognition for organizations that prioritize employee satisfaction, fair HR practices, and workplace quality. Certification gives you valuable insights and a respected employer certificate that supports recruitment and retention.
Turn Employee Feedback Into Competitive Advantage
The Top Employer Certificate provides more than recognition. It delivers meaningful insights from employee feedback and HR evaluation, helping organizations identify strengths, improve workplace quality, and position themselves as employers of choice in a competitive labor market.

Common Questions
Frequently Asked
Frequently Asked
Detailed answers to the most commonly asked questions about the Top Employer Certificate, including how the certification process works, who can apply, what your organization receives, and how the certificate helps strengthen your employer brand, attract qualified candidates, and improve employee satisfaction.
The Top Employer Certificate is an independent employer certificate that confirms your company is a trusted, people‑first workplace. It is not a badge you simply buy or a rating based on a few online reviews. Instead, it is awarded after your organization completes a structured HR interview and a representative employee survey. Together, these show how your benefits, policies, and culture actually work in everyday life. When you display the Top Employer Certificate, you send a clear signal to candidates, employees, and partners that your workplace has been evaluated using transparent criteria and a science‑based methodology. It shows that you care about employee satisfaction, fair HR practices, and long‑term workplace quality rather than short‑term branding alone. The Top Employer award is based on a representative survey developed in accordance with scientific standards and based on the latest research findings
Ask ten managers from top employers what makes their company a great place to work and you will get ten different answers. The American research tells a quieter story. For years now, Gallup, Pew, Ipsos, ADP and MetLife have gone straight to the source and asked employees themselves, in samples large enough to take seriously. What comes back is far less glamorous than the LinkedIn version. It is also far more useful.
Pay, security, flexibility — the unglamorous basics still win
Strip away the slogans and the fundamentals come out on top. A 2025 global study put competitive pay, job security and flexibility at the head of the list: the things people simply will not trade away. (Ipsos Karian and Box, 2025)
In one of the largest US employee surveys, 56% named compensation as their single biggest concern, and that share has been climbing since 2022. (ADP, 2024)
Here is the awkward part. Pay is also where people are least content. Only about three in ten say they are highly satisfied with what they earn. So it matters most and disappoints most often — a tension worth sitting with before you reach for the perks budget. (Pew Research Center / Gallup, 2024)
Flexibility stopped being a perk
Working from somewhere other than a desk has gone from exception to expectation. Among people whose jobs allow it, 60% want a hybrid setup, 33% want to be fully remote, and just 7% want to be in the office full time. (Gallup, 2025) And they now put a number on it. 22% expect a raise if you take their flexibility away, and 40% say they would start looking elsewhere. Flexibility and pay are no longer separate conversations — take one back and you are, in effect, cutting the other. (Owl Labs, 2025)
The part most employers get wrong: showing they care
This is the gap that should keep HR awake. Just 21% of employees strongly agree that their organization cares about their wellbeing — a record low. (Gallup, 2024) Trust is just as lopsided. 82% of employers believe their people trust leadership; only 60% of employees actually do. The payoff for closing that gap is real: where trust exists, people are two and a half times more likely to feel genuinely healthy. (MetLife, 2025)
Recognition and growth: small things, rarely done
Almost everyone wants to be noticed for their work. Almost nobody is. Only 23% strongly agree they received meaningful feedback in the past week — a remarkably low bar to be missing. (Gallup, 2024)
Development is not a nice-to-have either. 80% say growth opportunities make them more engaged, and thin career prospects are one of the leading reasons people quit, cited by 44%. (DHR Global; Gallup / Owl Labs, 2025)
In the end, it nearly all comes back to the manager
If there is one finding to carry away, it is this. Roughly 70% of the difference in team engagement traces back to the manager. Which is, oddly, encouraging. Being a great employer is not about out-spending your competitors. It is about who you put in charge of people, and how they show up every day. For a small or mid-sized company, that is about the best news there is. (Gallup, Q12 meta-analysis, 2024)
This is what it means to be a Top Employer
People want to be paid fairly, to feel secure, and to keep some say over how they work. Beyond that, they want to believe their employer genuinely cares — and to be trusted, recognised, and given room to grow. The most striking pattern across all of it is not a single statistic. It is the distance between what employers think they offer and what employees say they experience. Close that gap, and the “top employer” label tends to follow on its own.
Being a top employer means that an organization offers a workplace where people can develop, feel respected, and stay for the long term. It is not only about salary or benefits, but about how the company treats employees in everyday situations: how managers communicate, how decisions are made, and how people are supported when they learn or make mistakes. A top employer usually has clear values, fair policies, and leaders who take responsibility for the employee experience. In many cases, this is confirmed through external feedback, such as independent certification like top employer with structured employee surveys, rather than just internal claims.
When a company is recognized as a top employer, it signals to candidates, employees, and partners that the organization takes its responsibility as an employer seriously and invests in a healthy, future‑oriented work environment. Top employers regularly survey their staff and use the feedback to initiate a process of continuous improvement.
Why the honest answer for “Who is the Top Employer in the World?” is “it depends who’s counting” — and what a defensible answer would actually take. Type the question into a search bar and you will get many different answers. Each is presented as the answer. None of them is exactly wrong. But none of them is quite what it claims to be, either and the reason has nothing to do with the companies. It has to do with how they are measured.
A ranking is only as good as its sample
Market and social research lives or dies by a short list of quality criteria: objectivity, reliability, validity, and — for any statement about a whole population — representativeness. Global employer rankings tend to wobble on that last one, and once you know what to look for, the pattern is hard to unsee.
Companies usually have to apply to be considered, and often to pay. Eligibility frequently depends on already appearing on a handful of other lists. Participation is voluntary, and response rates are rarely published. Stack all of that on top of each other, across dozens of countries with wildly different sample sizes, and the league table you end up with mostly reflects which companies opted in and managed to rally their staff to respond. Not which workplace is, in any measurable sense, the best.
That is not a scandal. It is ordinary selection bias. But it does mean the headline “World’s Best” — is carrying far more weight than the underlying data can bear. As a scientific claim, it simply does not hold up.
What a defensible answer actually looks like
Here is the uncomfortable part for anyone who enjoys a tidy ranking: you cannot credibly line up a hotel group operating in 67 countries against a forty-person engineering firm and crown a single global winner. The two are not on the same scale, and no amount of survey volume fixes that.
What you can do — and what actually carries meaning — is measure one company properly. That takes a census, not a convenience sample. Every employee invited, rather than a hand-picked or self-selecting few. Anonymous responses, so people answer honestly. A validated questionnaire. And, above all, a participation rate high enough that the people who stayed silent are not quietly bending the result. Invite only the enthusiasts and you have measured your fan club. Invite everyone, and have most of them show up, and you have measured your company. Only the second number is worth putting on a seal.
Which is exactly the point of the “Top Employer” certification
This is the logic behind the Top Employer certification. Instead of dropping a company into a global league table, Top Employer runs a representative survey inside the company itself. The entire workforce is invited. Responses are anonymous. And the result only counts when enough people actually take part — the threshold that keeps non-response bias in check. A separate HR interview adds context on what the employer genuinely offers its people.
The certificate makes a smaller claim than “Best” and that is the whole point. It says, transparently and defensibly, that your own people — most of them, not a curated handful — rate you as a strong employer. That is a claim that survives contact with a methodologist.
So, who is the top employer in the world?
Honestly, the question is the problem. There is no representative sample of the planet’s workforce, and there never will be. The better question — the one you can actually answer with evidence — is much closer to home: are you a top employer for the people who work for you? Ask all of them, anonymously, and pay attention to what comes back. That answer you can stand behind.
A top employer certification is often treated as a marketing accessory a logo for the careers page and the e-mail footer. The research literature suggests something far more fundamental. Viewed through the lens of information economics, the central purpose of such a program is to solve a specific, well-documented market problem: the information asymmetry between an employer and the people deciding whether to work for it.
The labor market as a “market for lemons”
When candidates evaluate a prospective employer, the attributes that matter most — the real culture, the quality of management, how people are actually treated — cannot be observed before signing the contract and are only partially observable afterward. In the vocabulary of information economics, employment behaves much like a credence good (Darby & Karni, 1973): its quality is difficult to verify even while it is being “consumed.” Akerlof (1970) described what happens in such markets. When buyers cannot reliably distinguish high quality from low, they discount quality across the board, and genuinely strong providers struggle to be recognized. Good employers face exactly this predicament: their true quality is largely invisible at the moment a candidate decides.
Certification as a credible signal
Signalling theory (Spence, 1973) describes the remedy. A party holding hidden quality can communicate it credibly by sending a signal that is costly and difficult to fake. Applied to recruitment (Rynes, 1991; Connelly, Certo, Ireland & Reutzel, 2011), a third-party certification is precisely such a signal. It transfers part of the quality assessment to an external body, and because the resulting mark is verifiable rather than merely self-asserted, candidates weight it more heavily than an employer’s own claims about itself. This is the core purpose of a top employer certification programme: to convert unobservable employer quality into an observable, credible signal that reduces uncertainty on the candidate’s side of the market.
The evidence that the signal does real work
The recruitment literature consistently connects employer image and reputation to applicant behavior. The meta-analysis by Chapman, Uggerslev, Carroll, Piasentin and Jones (2005) identified organisational image as a strong predictor of job-pursuit intentions and applicant attraction. Reputation signals increase both the size and the quality of the applicant pool (Cable & Turban, 2003; Lievens & Slaughter, 2016). For certifications specifically, Dineen and Allen (2016), drawing on 624 participants across 16 “Best Places to Work” competitions over three years, linked third-party employer endorsements to measurable human-capital outcomes — applicant-pool quality and voluntary turnover. The author’s own experimental research on employer seals points in the same direction: a credible seal can shift candidates’ willingness to apply even when other information is held constant. The signal, in short, demonstrably influences behavior.
… but only when the signal is genuinely credible
Here, the literature adds a decisive qualification, and it is where many programs fall short. Dineen and Allen (2016) stress that the power of a certification depends on its credibility and its comparability. A signal that is cheap to obtain, or that rests on opaque or unrepresentative measurement, is a weak signal — and a weak signal dressed up as a strong one is arguably worse than none at all, because it pollutes the market in the same way Akerlof’s lemons do. A seal that any applicant organization can effectively purchase, or that surveys only a small, self-selected group of employees, does not reduce information asymmetry. It adds noise to it.
This is why the methodology behind a certification is not a technical footnote but the very substance of its purpose. A program fulfills its function only when the underlying measurement can bear the evidential weight the signal implies: a representative employee survey rather than a convenience sample, transparent and published criteria, and an assessment that is independent of the certified party. Absent that foundation, the logo communicates nothing that a methodologist — or, increasingly, an informed candidate — would trust.
Purpose of a Top Employer Certification
The main purpose of a top employer certification program, then, is neither decoration nor recognition for its own sake. It is to serve as a credible, verifiable signal of genuine employer quality in a labor market where that quality is otherwise hard to observe — reducing uncertainty for candidates and allowing strong employers to be distinguished from the rest. Whether a particular program actually serves that purpose is, in the end, an empirical question about its methodology, not a matter of how impressive the badge looks.
There is no single certification that is always associated with the highest salaries. Earnings depend on many factors, including industry, job role, level of experience, and geographic location. Certifications in areas such as technology, cybersecurity, project management, finance, and healthcare are often linked to strong earning potential because they validate specialized knowledge that is in high demand.
In the field of human resources and employer branding, the value of a certification is measured less by direct salary impact and more by the business benefits it creates. A recognized employer certification, such as a Top Employer Certificate, is not something that can simply be purchased. It must be earned through a structured process that includes an HR interview, an anonymous employee survey, and an independent evaluation based on transparent criteria. It can help organizations attract qualified candidates, strengthen employee retention, and improve workplace quality. These outcomes can reduce recruitment costs and support long-term business performance.
For companies, the most valuable certification is one that aligns with their strategic goals and delivers measurable results. Rather than focusing only on which certification is “highest paid,” it is often more useful to ask which certification provides the greatest return on investment through increased trust, stronger reputation, and better organizational outcomes.
A quality seal appears as a small graphic in the corner of a product, a website, or a careers page. Its function is economic, and it is anything but small. Wherever a buyer cannot easily judge quality before committing, a credible seal does what the product or service cannot do for itself: it makes invisible quality visible. That, not the reassuring design, is why seals matter.
The problem a seal solves: hidden quality
Information economics classifies goods by how easily their quality can be assessed. Search goods can be evaluated before purchase; experience goods only after use (Nelson, 1970); and credence goods cannot be judged reliably even after consumption (Darby & Karni, 1973). Many of the attributes buyers care about most — whether food is genuinely organic, whether a service is genuinely competent, whether an employer genuinely treats people well — are experience or credence attributes. They are hard to verify at the moment of decision and sometimes long after. Akerlof (1970) demonstrated the consequence. When buyers cannot tell good from bad, they rationally discount everything, and high-quality providers are penalized alongside the weak ones. This is the classic “market for lemons.”
The seal as a credible signal
Signaling theory (Spence, 1973) provides the solution. A provider with genuine but hidden quality can communicate it by sending a costly, hard-to-fake signal. A third-party quality seal is exactly such a signal, because it shifts judgment to an independent body whose endorsement the provider cannot simply declare for itself (Connelly, Certo, Ireland & Reutzel, 2011). The seal substitutes for the buyer’s missing information with an external guarantee. This is precisely why a credible seal can carry more weight than the provider’s own claims: it is verifiable rather than self-asserted.
What the evidence shows
Across very different markets, credible seals change behavior through the same channel — trust. In e-commerce, third-party assurance and trust seals lower perceived risk and raise consumer trust, which in turn increases the intention to transact and buy (McKnight, Choudhury & Kacmar, 2002; Kim, Ferrin & Rao, 2008). In food and consumer goods, independent expert labels are consistently judged more trustworthy than self-declared or consumer-generated claims, and that trust feeds directly into willingness to purchase.
The labor market offers a particularly clean demonstration. In a randomized experiment by Scharfenberg (2025), 1,093 participants with a representative age distribution were shown an identical job advertisement that differed in one respect only: whether it carried a quality seal (“Top Arbeitgeber”). Without the seal, 37.96% of respondents rated an application as “likely” or “very likely”; with it, that figure rose to 53.95%, while the share judging an application “unlikely” or “very unlikely” fell from 17.88% to 6.04%. Because the seal was the only thing that changed, the difference can be attributed to the signal itself. The mechanism turns out to be strikingly stable across domains: a seal works by building trust under uncertainty, and trust is what translates into the decision.
Important: A seal is only as valuable as its credibility is
This is the decisive qualification, and it comes from the certification literature itself. Jahn, Schramm and Spiller (2005), examining quality labels as a consumer-policy instrument, show that a seal reduces information asymmetry only if the seal itself is reliable: independent of the certified party, transparent in its criteria, and resistant to manipulation. A label that is easy to obtain, loosely defined, or effectively controlled by the very organization it certifies does not transfer trust — it dilutes it.
There is a sharper version of this problem. When weak and strong seals proliferate side by side, buyers can no longer tell them apart and begin to discount all of them, so the seals recreate the very lemons market they were meant to cure. A signal that everyone can obtain ceases to be a signal at all.
This is not a hypothetical concern. Analyzing more than 60 employer seals from the perspectives of applicants, employees, and employers, Scharfenberg (2025) documents substantial methodological deficits across a large share of them — including cases in which the impression of an independent, neutral assessment is created without one actually having taken place. Earlier work points to why this persists: most people know little or nothing about the methods behind the seals they encounter (Scharfenberg, 2022), which allows a weak seal to borrow the credibility of a strong one for as long as nobody looks closely. The remedy this research proposes is exactly the one signaling theory predicts — seals built on a representative survey of the relevant population (for employer seals, the workforce itself), with transparent criteria applied independently of the certified party.
Why a Quality Seal matters
A quality seal is important, then, not because it looks reassuring but because, when credible, it performs a precise and valuable economic function: it turns hidden quality into a visible, trustworthy signal, lowers the buyer’s perceived risk, and lets genuinely good providers be recognized in markets where they would otherwise be indistinguishable from the rest — employer seals being simply one special case of the same logic. Its value, however, is entirely conditional on its integrity. A trustworthy seal is one of the most efficient instruments we have for resolving uncertainty between two parties who cannot otherwise verify each other. An untrustworthy one is just a sticker. The difference between the two is the method.
A seal of quality approval is a specific type of quality seal that indicates an independent organization has reviewed and approved a product, service, or process against defined standards. It acts as a shorthand for “this has been checked and meets our criteria”. In many industries, seals of quality approval are used to show compliance with safety, performance, or ethical guidelines.
In the world of work, an employer certificate or top employer seal can function in a similar way: it signals that an organization’s people practices have been assessed and approved within a particular framework. This helps candidates, employees, and partners make more informed choices. Instead of relying only on marketing messages, they can look for a recognized seal of quality approval that represents a structured review and transparent criteria.
A Good employee can look very different depending on the role, but five qualities appear in almost every description. First, reliability: they keep commitments, meet deadlines, and can be trusted with important tasks. Second, willingness to learn: they stay open to new tools, feedback, and ways of working, which is crucial in a changing world. Third, collaboration: they communicate clearly, respect colleagues, and contribute positively to team dynamics. Fourth, accountability: they take responsibility for their work, own mistakes, and focus on solutions. Fifth, integrity: they act honestly, treat others fairly, and align their behavior with the organization’s values. When many people in a company show these qualities, it becomes much easier to create the kind of culture that supports a top employer certificate and keeps both performance and well‑being in balance.
Many models describe employer branding using pillars or key dimensions. A common approach is to focus on four main areas.
- The first is culture: the everyday behaviors, leadership style, and values people experience at work.
- The second is career and development: how employees can grow, learn new skills, and move into new roles over time.
- The third is compensation and benefits: not only salary, but also health, flexibility, and other forms of support that show the organization values its people.
- The fourth is purpose and reputation: what the company stands for and how it is perceived by the outside world.
Together, these pillars shape how current and future employees view the organization. A clear employer brand, backed by real practices and possibly a top employer certificate, helps companies attract and retain people whose expectations match what the workplace actually offers.
In our network are currently four internationally recognized quality seals focused on employer excellence, workplace standards, and organizational quality assessment. These include USIQ.org in the United States, DIQP.eu in Germany, OIQP.at in Austria, and SIQP.ch in Switzerland, which is currently under development. Each organization operates independently within its region and focuses on evaluating companies based on workplace quality, employee satisfaction, organizational culture, and professional standards.
These certifications are designed to help employers demonstrate credibility, transparency, and commitment to maintaining high workplace standards. For companies, receiving a recognized employer certification can strengthen employer branding, improve talent attraction, and build trust with employees, applicants, and business partners. As workplace expectations continue to evolve globally, independently recognized employer quality seals are becoming increasingly important indicators of organizational excellence and responsible leadership.
The Top Employer certification is designed to be to be clear and manageable, so that it can be implemented with minimal effort for your HR team and employees. The process combines an anonymous employee survey with an HR interview and can typically be completed within a few business days. First,
Certification follows three core steps:
- Your company provides basic information and completes an online HR interview that covers benefits, policies, and HR practices. This step is usually handled by HR or management and takes around one hour, depending on company size.
- Next, all employees receive access to an anonymous, GDPR‑compliant survey via personal link or QR code, making participation quick and convenient on any device. The survey measures satisfaction and willingness to recommend your company as an employer, using core questions that can be slightly adapted.
- Finally, an independent certification body analyses both components, combines them into an overall score, generates a tabular report and, if the result is strong enough, issues your Top Employer Certificate and seal for 24 months.
In a Top employer employee survey: Every employee currently working at your company gets the opportunity to take part in the survey. Participation is simple: they receive a personal link or can scan a QR code and then answer the questions online, on their computer or smartphone.
The survey is anonymous, so employees can respond honestly without any concern about being identified. It usually takes around 10 minutes and focuses on topics such as overall satisfaction, workplace atmosphere, communication, development opportunities, and how likely they are to recommend your company as an employer. The core questions are standardized, but they can be slightly adapted to your organisation, and additional questions can be added if you want deeper insights.
Becoming a Top Employer helps your company stand out in a competitive hiring market and gives you an advantage when attracting qualified candidates. Many organizations describe themselves as a “great place to work”, but a Top Employer Certificate turns that claim into credible proof. When applicants see an employer certificate based on an HR interview and a real employee survey, they immediately understand that your culture and policies have been tested. At the same time, you gain structured insight into what your employees value and where there is room to improve. In other words, the Top Employer Certificate strengthens your employer brand externally while supporting better decisions internally.
The HR interview is aimed at your HR team or, in smaller organisations, at management. It is conducted online via a secure link, so there is no need for a separate on‑site appointment.
In this interview, you answer questions about your HR structures and offerings: for example, benefits, working hours models, flexibility, training and development, leadership culture, onboarding, and internal communication. The goal is not to “catch you out” but to get a realistic picture of how you support your employees. The interview usually takes about an hour, depending on company size and complexity.
The overall timeline for becoming a Top Employer certification is relatively short and flexible. You can start the certification at any time during the year. Once you decide to proceed, the survey setup can usually be completed within a couple of business days. The employee survey then runs for a defined period, often at least one workweek, so your team has enough time to participate. For larger companies, the period can be extended. While employees are responding, your HR or management completes the online interview. After the survey closes and the HR interview has been completed, the results are evaluated, and your overall score is calculated. In many cases, the full process: from initial setup to receiving your Top Employer Certificate and seal, can be completed within approximately one to two weeks, depending on your internal timing and response rates.



