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Reflecting your corporate culture in office design
Employer brand

Reflecting your corporate culture in office design

How to reflect your corporate culture in office design: method, costs, ROI and field feedback for HR directors and company leaders. Kytom guide.

11 cities covered
1 200+ spaces transformed
66 passionate people

"Our offices don't look like us"

What our clients tell us.

You will recognise your situation if…

  • Candidates are disappointed from the very first visit to the premises
  • The HR narrative contrasts with an impersonal open-plan floor
  • Teams don't take ownership of shared spaces
  • No visual element tells your story

Issues and impacts

Hidden cost

A misaligned office hampers recruitment. The Robert Half firm estimates the average cost of a failed executive hire at 15,000 euros. Multiplied by 5 or 6 candidates declining the offer after a visit, the total exceeds 80,000 euros per year, not counting the HR time spent restarting the processes.

Human risk

An environment perceived as inconsistent with company values reduces engagement by 22%. Employees disengage, turnover rises. On a team of 80 people, 4 avoidable departures per year represent nearly 400,000 euros in indirect costs (recruitment, onboarding, lost productivity).

Reputational risk

Glassdoor reviews and candidate visits spread fast. 64% of working professionals check out the work environment before applying (Welcome to the Jungle 2023 study). A modern company image contradicted by dull premises durably weakens the employer brand and complicates every future recruitment campaign.

How Kytom goes about it

Kytom starts with a cultural audit, not a moodboard. Our interior architects interview the executive committee, HR and employees to identify the 3 to 5 values that are genuinely lived, then translate them into concrete elements: materials, colour palette, furniture, team rituals. Since 2006, more than 1,200 clients have validated this method on projects ranging from 200 to 4,500 m². We work with established brands (Vitra, Herman Miller) while bringing in local craftspeople for a personal touch. Each project includes a written design framework, transferable to future fit-outs, ensuring consistency over 8 to 10 years despite changes in teams.

Our method

  1. 1. Diagnose

    Interviews with 8 to 12 representative employees, a values workshop with the executive committee, analysis of existing communication materials. Deliverable: a written mapping of lived values versus stated values, with identified gaps and priority spatial levers.

  2. 2. Frame

    Definition of a dedicated interior brand book: palette, materials, signage typography, iconography, layout principles. Validation by management and HR over 2 workshops. Deliverable: a 25 to 40-page document serving as a reference for every subsequent design decision.

  3. 3. Design

    Plans, photorealistic 3D perspectives, furniture and finishes selection. Integration of striking pieces (artworks, quotes, craftsmanship) telling the company's story. Deliverable: a detailed, costed design file with 2 or 3 budget variants between 800 and 1,500 euros excl. tax per m².

  4. 4. Deliver

    Project management as general contractor, coordination of trades, weekly quality control. Handover in the presence of the client and the future internal ambassadors. Deliverable: operational spaces compliant with the brand book, plus a filmed guided tour for onboarding new recruits.

Cost and ROI

Cost range per m²
800 to 1,500 euros excl. tax/m²
Includes design, furniture, works and personalised cultural elements over an average of 850 m².
Timeline
12 weeks on average
Diagnosis and framing 3 weeks, design 3 weeks, works 6 weeks depending on scope.
Typical ROI
Payback in 2 to 3 years
Through lower turnover, faster recruitment and an 8 to 12% productivity increase observed.

Anonymised field feedback

"Our candidates now tell us they feel our culture from the moment they walk in. The offer acceptance rate jumped within 6 months, without changing anything in the packages."

+31%
Offer acceptance rate
-24%
Annual turnover
clearly improved
Employee satisfaction (eNPS)

Frequently asked questions

Do you have to redo all the offices to reflect your culture?

No. A targeted repositioning of the reception area, meeting rooms and 2 or 3 signature zones is often enough. Plan for 30 to 40% of the budget of a full project, for a perceived impact close to that of a full project.

How do you avoid the superficial decor effect?

By starting from team rituals, not graphic codes. If the culture values transparency, you design open spaces with direct visibility onto management. Consistency comes from uses, not wall stickers. Our interior brand book formalises this logic.

Should HR or the real estate department lead the project?

Both, as a pair. HR ensures the cultural grounding, the real estate department secures the technical and budgetary framing. On 60% of our employer brand projects, an executive committee sponsor is appointed to arbitrate in under 5 working days.

How long does a cultural design last?

Between 8 and 10 years if the brand book is respected during changes. Signature materials (solid wood, technical textiles) age well. Modular Vitra or Herman Miller furniture makes it possible to reconfigure spaces without breaking the overall visual consistency.

Can you measure the impact on recruitment?

Yes, through 3 indicators: offer acceptance rate after a visit, average recruitment time, eNPS of new recruits at 90 days. Our clients observe on average a 20 to 35% improvement on these 3 metrics within the 12 months following handover.

How do you involve teams without slowing down the project?

Through 2 workshops of 90 minutes maximum with 8 to 12 representative ambassadors, during the diagnosis phase. Beyond that, decisions are made by the executive committee sponsor. This method preserves collective engagement while keeping to the 12-week average timeline.