How do ex-employees affect your AI visibility?
The forgotten voice
You invest in employee advocacy. Your current employees share content, write reviews, build your employer brand. Excellent.
But what happens when they leave?
Research shows a surprising fact: alumni can contribute to almost half of your total Glassdoor score. Ex-employees have not disappeared, they continue to shape your employer brand, including in AI responses.
Why alumni matter for AI
LLMs synthesise information from multiple sources. And ex-employees leave traces:
- Glassdoor reviews: Often written after departure, with distance and perspective
- LinkedIn profiles: “Worked at [company]” remains visible, including descriptions
- References: In conversations that AI does not directly see, but indirectly influence
- Thought leadership: Former employees writing about their experiences
A candidate asking “What is it like to work at [company]?” will get answers based on current and former employees.
The alumni impact in figures
Research on alumni networks shows:
- 2x higher rehire rates in active alumni programmes
- 67% from organisations Reports more positive word-of-mouth from engaged ex-employees
- 38% more likely on early market intelligence from alumni
- Higher referral volumes of ex-employees than of current employees
Alumni are not just a reputation factor, they are a recruitment channel.
Exit experience defines AI legacy
How someone leaves determines what they say and what AI quotes:
| Exit experience | Likely AI impact |
|---|---|
| Positive farewell, transition support | Positive reviews, referrals, ambassadorship |
| Neutral, businesslike farewell | Neutral or no reviews |
| Negative, conflictual departure | Negative reviews, warnings to network |
Research confirms: ex-employees who received transition support are significantly more likely to recommend the organisation.
An alumni strategy for AI visibility
1. Invest in the exit experience
- Exit calls listening, not defending
- Transition support (outplacement, references, networking)
- Dignified farewell, regardless of reason for departure
2. Build an alumni network
- LinkedIn group or dedicated platform
- Regular updates on business developments
- Exclusive events or content for alumni
- Four alumni successes public
3. Facilitate positive contributions
- Ask for Glassdoor reviews on positive leavers
- Invite alumni to thought leadership (guest blogs, podcasts)
- Keep in touch with high-performers for referrals
4. Monitor alumni sentiment
- Track Glassdoor reviews from former employees
- Monitor LinkedIn posts that mention your company
- Respond to negative feedback where possible
The boomerang bonus
A strong alumni programme has a bonus: boomerang hires. Former employees who return are often:
- Faster productive (know the culture)
- Strong ambassadors (deliberately chose to come back)
- Credible voices in AI responses (“I worked there, left, and came back”)
Practical steps
This week:
- Analyse your Glassdoor: how many reviews are from former employees?
- Evaluate your current exit process: how do leavers experience it?
This month:
- Start a simple alumni network (LinkedIn group)
- Improve your exit interview with focus on future relationship
This quarter:
- Launch a formal alumni programme
- Create an alumni engagement calendar (updates, events)
The bottomline
In the AI era, the relationship with an employee does not end when they leave. Ex-employees continue to shape your employer brand. In reviews, in conversations, in AI responses.
The employers who win are the ones who understand that every exit is an investment in future reputation. Because what alumni say, AI quotes.
Next article
In the next article, we solve the offline-online paradox: How to make physical recruitment events visible in LLM answers, from event page to evergreen content.
This article is part of a series on GEO and employer branding.
Sources:
- Harvard Business Review, “The Value of Corporate Alumni Networks” (2024)
- Glassdoor, “Employee Review Patterns: Current vs. Former Employees” (2024)
- LinkedIn, “Boomerang Employee Trends Report” (2025)
- SHRM, “Exit Experience and Employer Brand Impact” (2024)