The American workforce is struggling. Take a look at these numbers:
It all adds up to a bleak picture. But as an HR professional, you have the chance to make a difference for your employees. If you don’t already have one, consider offering an employee wellness program, which can:
If you already have a wellness program that isn’t working, keep reading to find out how to do it better. Let’s get started with how to make an employee wellness program that actually works.
What a wellness program looks like depends on the company. Indeed describes a corporate wellness program as “a set of benefits a company implements to improve the well-being of its team members.” But these benefits range widely, and could include:
“The more tailored a wellness program can be, the better,” says Kelley Rexroad, an award-winning HR consultant, coach, and instructor for USF Corporate Training and Professional Development courses. To tailor your program, start by looking at the data — what story does it tell you about your employees and their challenges, your workplace culture, and industry trends?
“You need to understand what’s important to your employees,” Rexroad says. “You’ve got to meet people where they are. That’s a phrase we hear a lot these days, but we’ve got to remember, we can’t sit in our offices and create these (wellness) programs and then go, ‘Oh well, nobody comes’… Is it something your employees even want?”
Get employee buy-in through:
Make sure you also have the support of your company’s leadership. To be successful, your program is going to need it.
A true wellness program is well-rounded, addressing “the mind, body, spirit,” says Rexroad. Here’s an example of each facet:
A commitment to wellness should extend beyond programs and become part of your company’s everyday culture. That includes making policies that improve your employees’ lives. Let’s look at an example:
If your employee is distressed about childcare, “Meditation Mondays” aren’t going to do much good. Instead, make a policy change that relieves stress in a practical way: offer subsidized childcare, gender blind family leave, or flexible/hybrid work schedules, and base your performance metrics on results, not “hours spent in the office,” suggests this New York Times article on creating an equitable workplace.
Provide a variety of programs to ensure you accommodate your employees’ diverse needs. “It doesn’t mean everything has to be for everybody, but you should have enough of an array,” Rexroad says. She suggests you think about who your audience is — and then consider who you are missing. For example, you might change the location of your nature day from a trail to a boardwalk to accommodate employees in wheelchairs. Or, if single parents can’t come to your meditation retreat, make sure you also offer them something like a parent-child bowling tournament.
In addition, make sure your programs don’t single out certain employees or penalize them for not participating. “A truly effective corporate wellness program should include and motivate everyone, rather than pressuring, embarrassing or even bribing high-risk employees to improve their health,” explains this SHRM article on inclusive programs.
Finally, pay attention to legal and compliance requirements, such as the Americans With Disabilities Act, Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. (You can read more about them in this SHRM article on building a wellness program.)
You can have the best wellness program in the history of HR, but it won’t do any good if your employees don’t know about it or aren’t motivated to participate. Follow Rexroad’s four C’s: clear, consistent, constant communication. Help employees understand:
Get the message out in a variety of ways — your monthly newsletter, communication from leadership, social media posts, posters, etc.
Maybe you don’t have a big budget for wellness programs just yet. That’s okay. You don’t “have to have a full-fledged program to get started,” Rexroad says. “Just keep adding to it and pay attention to the data.” There are plenty of free ways to encourage well-being. You just need to get creative:
Treat yourself with the same compassion you give your colleagues and employees. You can’t fix everything overnight, and even the best wellness program has its limits. But by creating (or reinventing) a corporate employee wellness program and a healthy corporate culture, you’re showing employees that you care. “Any stressor that we can relieve for our employees allows them to focus better,” Rexroad says. “It means that we recognize them as being people, not just something we can use up.”
Don’t forget that you need support, too. USF Corporate Training and Professional Development offers professional development courses for HR professionals, so you can get the mentorship you need to thrive.