It’s no secret that the pandemic turned the workplace upside down. With high rates of stress, burnout, and frustration, 90% of employers are investing in mental health initiatives as a result.
You’re likely already investing in your employees’ skills. It’s also essential to invest in your employees as humans, too. Unless you’re employing an entirely robotic workforce, corporate wellness programs help you take a more human-centered approach to business.
Investing in employee wellness is the right thing to do, but it also comes with benefits to your bottom line, such as:
Sounds promising, right? If you can execute your wellness initiatives successfully, this will be a win for both your business and your employees.
The problem is that corporate wellness programs are famously hard to execute. If you’re struggling to design better wellness programs at work, you aren’t alone. Here are five major challenges of implementing a wellness program—and what your company can do about it.
Did you know that wellness programs can decrease absenteeism by up to 300%? That’s enough to make any business get on board with wellness. The problem is that it’s easy to go overboard.
Some wellness initiatives are overzealous and heavy-handed. This usually happens in the form of:
These problems quickly lead to resentment among employees. As a business, you can’t overstep your boundaries; after all, you aren’t your employees’ doctor or psychologist.
Corporate wellness only works when it’s an optional, positive experience for employees. Never ask for personal information that isn’t critical to the operation of your business. If you need employee health information for some reason, consider using a third-party company to manage that, so the information is completely separate from your business.
Corporate wellness programs need to be as simple as possible. If too many moving parts or “gotcha” clauses make it hard to succeed, your employees won’t stick with the program. And if people don’t stick with the program, what’s the point of offering corporate wellness in the first place?
Make your corporate wellness programs as simple as possible. It should be easy for people of any fitness level to participate, too. Depending on your company, you can consider programs like:
When in doubt, run a few of your ideas past HR, leadership, and an employee committee to ensure that your wellness program is truly easy to understand.
What do you do if employees don’t want to participate in your corporate wellness program? Remember, you shouldn’t make this mandatory, so you need to find other ways to engage employees.
Think about it: if people don’t want to participate, it means there might be something wrong with the way the program has been set up. Are employees so overworked that they don’t have time for wellness? Or is the program just not worth their time?
Motivation can be a big problem, but fortunately, you have a lot of recourse here:
So, you know you want to do a wellness program, but there’s one big problem: you don’t have a dedicated team (or even an employee) to run it for you.
Everyone is busy and overworked these days, but you can’t run an effective wellness program if you don’t have anyone in charge of it. You need someone to be accountable for running the program.
If your budget won’t allow hiring a full-time employee to manage wellness, create a committee instead. This spreads out the workload, eliminates the need to hire more people, and helps you plan wellness programs more democratically.
The age-old issue with wellness programs is that there aren’t enough funds to create the program successfully. This is especially true if you have a C-suite that needs to see hard, bottom-line returns before agreeing to any new initiatives.
You know that you need some kind of budget for wellness, but you don’t have to break the bank. This isn’t an advertising campaign where you’re going to see sales immediately. However, you will see the difference in employee retention, productivity, and lower absenteeism.
If you don’t already, work with your HR team to track your historical performance with these metrics. You can even roll out a pilot program with one department, track that implementation, and get proof of concept first. It’s much easier to obtain funding if you have hard numbers in hand!
After years of employment and work-from-home stress, wellness is on everyone’s minds. It’s possible for companies to invest in their employees’ health, and in doing so, you’ll want to be careful about overstepping boundaries, causing confusion, and breaking your budget.
While the bottom line matters, your employees—and your business—can’t succeed if they’re stressed, sick, or miserable. The goal of wellness programs is to keep your best asset—your employees—functioning at a high level.
Is it time to create a culture of wellness at your workplace? Create Brand Love moments with your employees through the power of culture-boosting campaigns that delight (and retain) your team. Partner with Boundless to see the power of cultivating Brand Love firsthand.