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Purpose

This study aims to examine how corporate reputation, employer attractiveness and value congruence shape Generation Z’s early reactions to potential employers in developing-country contexts, using Vietnam as an illustrative case, and shows that inspiration helps convert initial interest into applications and engagement.

Design/methodology/approach

The insights are drawn from a cross-sectional survey of 475 Generation Z (or Gen Z) job seekers in Hanoi, Vietnam. The study analyzed how their perceptions of corporate reputation, employer attractiveness and personal value alignment combine to create a powerful state of inspiration.

Findings

The study result confirms that while a strong corporate reputation and an attractive employer brand are important for getting noticed, they are not enough on their own. The key finding is that value congruence acts as a powerful amplifier. When Gen Z job seekers feel a company’s values align with their own, the inspirational power of that company’s brand and reputation increases significantly. Inspiration is a distinct motivational state and can be measured with brief items of authentic, value-driven branding.

Research limitations/implications

Cross-sectional survey data from 475 Hanoi-based Gen Z job seekers limits causal inference and external validity beyond the local context. Future research should test a longitudinal, multicity design; examine inspiration as a mediator between brand signals and job pursuit; and assess value congruence as a moderator.

Practical implications

This study offers a practical roadmap for human resource (HR) and brand strategists. To increase interest among Gen Z applicants, organizations must move beyond surface-level branding and instead tell an authentic story about their purpose, culture and social impact. This requires making value alignment the core of the recruitment strategy, using all touchpoints, from social media to the interview process, to demonstrate a genuine match with the values this generation prioritizes. Ultimately, this means treating recruitment as a strategic marketing function, integrating HR and brand efforts to create a consistent and compelling candidate experience.

Social implications

By reducing information asymmetry for Gen Z job seekers, authentic value signals can decrease mismatch and underemployment, improve early-career retention and well-being, and support more inclusive hiring in developing-country labor markets, with Vietnam as an illustrative case.

Originality/value

This study positions inspiration as the link between brand signals and behavior in Generation Z talent attraction and uses Vietnam as an illustrative case of developing-country labor markets. It offers HR leaders, recruiters and brand managers an evidence-based, practical framework to build more meaningful connections with the next generation of talent and to improve early-career attraction outcomes.

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