Is it possible to get employees to truly engage with benefits communication?
Yes — but it takes a number of complementary strategies, plenty of employer listening, and an assist from technology.
"We're really seeing a blended workforce from a technology-expectation perspective," says
According to
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How can employers find the winning formula for their organization? Owenby recently spoke with EBN to offer his most tested methods and share how employers can strategically meld tech tools with live resources to capture employees' attention and boost utilization of available benefits.
As employers look to balance in-person support with
With respect to the technology piece and just due to the nature of broad social media applications, you almost need to have your own Twitter channel or Facebook channel. Companies that integrate communication and education elements into the normal aspects of social media use are the companies that probably have the best engagement with their benefits. It must be integrated into the existing app ecosystem.
You can have an app from Fidelity, an app from Anthem, Kaiser, Blue Cross Blue Shield, etc., but employers need to consolidate that into one spot where employees can access it. And at Aflac, we haven't gotten that down to a science yet. But we do have a portal where you can access all of those different things, whether it's a
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Are any employers striking that perfect balance?
Employers almost always believe that they do a great job of communicating their benefits. But two thirds of respondents to our survey say, "No they don't." Or, employers believe the value of their benefits is very high, but 58% of employees would say, "Well, we don't understand [our benefits], even if you are providing them." What surprises me the most is that we get this disconnect every year. We've been doing this survey for over a decade. You would think employers would get better at this over time.
What's behind that disconnect?
I suspect it's because employers in general aren't actually talking to their employees about what they want or need. Employers need to be dynamically engaging to understand what benefits people want, and not just through a survey after annual enrollment.
This is especially important when retention is a particular focus. Talk about the benefits people want, and talk about the proper way to use benefits, which can make a better experience for the employee and create a cheaper experience for the employer. And, as you think about the overall price and cost of insurance, employers should be happy to tell people about the benefits they've secured. If employees had the view that their benefits are a type of compensation — which really, it is — they would be much more interested in it, just like their paychecks.
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How much is the current state of remote/hybrid/in-person work impacting the benefits people are responding to?
At Aflac, we've gone to a largely 75% hybrid working environment. Basically, we have some expectation that there's a minimal number of days that you come to campus, based on where you're located. And there's still some resistance there, but we've worked to offer things that are attractive as we try to bring people back, like on-site child care, on-site healthcare, and having events and things that may be fun to bring people back in.
It's hard to talk about all the ways tech is changing the way we work without mentioning artificial intelligence. Is AI already disrupting the benefits world?
I think where machine learning is really going to come into play is from a benefits application — where you can unleash a type of ChatGPT on your 15,000 members' experience with healthcare and understand what services they're using the most often, where they're using them, how they're using them, the timing of how they're using them, and then use that information to change your offerings. Maybe in the future AI will help customize that instantly, but I haven't seen that yet. In fact, I may need to build an app just like that.