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02 October 2022
Employee benefits empower businesses to attract and retain the very best talent while supporting staff throughout the moments that matter most. As a result of the changing workplace in last few years, businesses have been forced to reevaluate their employee benefits offerings to ensure they are fit for purpose. Business leaders recognise the importance of benefits and technology in improving employee wellbeing, engagement and loyalty, with 56% of employees agreeing that the benefits their employer provides make them feel valued.
There are numerous things to consider when developing a successful employee benefits strategy. For example:
Here we look at ways to build the best employee benefits strategy for your business.
Considering the equivalent of 20% base salary on average is channelled into employee benefits, it’s surprising that this investment still receives little scrutiny. While many functions, such as finance or marketing, have employed analytics for some time, 80% of employers still rely solely on spreadsheets to analyse employee benefits data.
Attempting to effectively gather, standardise and analyse data on thousands of global employees without the effective analytics is impossible. It also makes it more likely that decisions will be made using out-of-date data, or that a single point of failure, will bring the whole system crashing down. Furthermore, it’s difficult to ensure manual systems remain GDPR compliant, leaving organisations open to errors that could lead to huge financial and reputational risk.
Analytics should underpin every element of your HR and benefits strategy. It is invaluable in tracking changes to employee benefits behaviour for example, enabling organisations to stay agile and keep their offering relevant. For example, as the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic took hold, organisations with this capability were able to track changes.
Within this new context, employers already equipped with analytics capabilities reaped rewards. These HR teams were able to see in near real-time how the fallout from the pandemic impacted their benefits offering and could identify any gaps or successes that appeared.
This understanding can lead to strategy changes: such as supplementing their wellbeing programmes, with virtual nutrition workshops or cooking classes, for example. Analytics help monitor scheme take-up, enabling HR teams to assess whether their benefits are being used by their workforce and delivering a good return on investment.
Providing a ‘globally consistent employee experience’ has been the number one priority for multinational organisations for the last few years and has now been propelled even higher up the corporate agenda.
The big win from investing in HR technology is that employers have been able to pivot their benefits offering to deal with the unprecedented challenge of keeping employees connected, engaged and supported across the world.
Technology is integral in keeping employees engaged with their benefits, allowing them to view and use them from any location and at any time, delivering real value. This level of flexibility was important pre-pandemic, but it’s become a must-have in today’s highly distributed work environment.
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