The Talent500 Blog

Why companies must prioritize wellness in the workplace

Harvard found that for every dollar spent on employee wellness, medical costs fall $3.27 and absenteeism drops $2.73, a 6-to-1 return on investment. Companies that commit to employee wellness have a decided advantage over their competitors. Just as any team will find their performance boosted when the members enjoy strong personal relationships with one another, happier and healthier employees are more productive and engaged.

The pandemic has been hard. According to a McKinsey report, 62% of employees globally consider mental-health issues to be a major challenge during the COVID-19 crisis. In light of this, 96% of companies globally provided additional mental-health resources to employees, but only one in six employees reported feeling supported. It’s not just about offering a few initiatives without truly making employee wellness a priority – ensuring that they are comfortable, healthy, and happy. SHRM defines workplace wellness as ‘any program intended to improve and promote health and fitness’. Programs and initiatives around employee wellness have been in place for a while but its nature has evolved over time, and especially during and post pandemic.  Primarily because now the boundaries between work and home are becoming increasingly difficult to define; lines are blurred and it could quickly lead to employees feeling isolated, disconnected, and burnt out. 

The most basic form of wellness is working in an organization where the leadership genuinely cares about employees. When leaders communicate their own intentions of prioritizing wellbeing openly, and follow it up with actionable behaviors, they can set the tone for a culture that empowers employees to focus and invest in themselves so that they can be more productive.

The truth is that no good work comes about by a single employee, making it imperative for them to feel connected, engaged, and valued to be productive. However, a holistic set of wellbeing programs, when done correctly, provide employees with the right incentives, support, tools, privacy, and strategies to embrace and practise healthy behaviors and to foster high-trust environments.

Offering employees wellness programs has a huge number of benefits, we’ve narrowed down on the top five: 

We are at an interesting phase in this workplace disruption, and companies need to get smart and serious about how they approach employee wellbeing. Making use of data and technology to develop innovative and sustainable programs have multiple benefits, some of which have been addressed previously in this article. 

While companies have always taken physical health seriously, since the pandemic, they are also understanding the need to decrease mental health stigma and increase/provide access to relevant services. The bottom line is that caring about employees and wanting them to be happier and healthier doesn’t make sense just for that employee, but also for the company’s overall performance. 

For more insights on building and managing a global workforce, schedule a consultation with experts from Talent500 today.

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