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Author: Andie Burjek

Posted on October 30, 2017June 29, 2023

Webasto: Optimas 2017 General Excellence Winner

From left: Kristy Lake, Sylvia Blair, Anne Boone, Corey Stowell, Philipp Schramm, Alisha Easterling, Charles Braxton, Tamala Meyers, Liz Beatty, John Wilder and Andre Schoenekaes.

The Great Recession hit Detroit and the auto industry hard. The federal government bailed out General Motors and Fiat Chrysler Automotive as sales took a huge hit.

Webasto Roof Systems Americas, a Rochester Hills, Michigan-based automotive supply company, was not immune to the fallout. But unlike the automakers’ relatively quick turnaround, financial and cultural aftershocks of the economic decline lingered at Webasto, the North American division of Germany-based Webasto Group.

“There was so much fear in the organization to be let go. It was unbelievable,” said Philipp Schramm, chief financial officer and vice president of human resources and IT at Webasto. “The industry around us, too, was not so good, like it is now. A lot of people were very worried. If you talked to someone on a Friday, people almost came into your office saying, ‘Do you want to let me go?’ ”

Read about the rest of our 2017 Optimas winners here

In the face of financial difficulties as well as a demoralized workforce, the company had a choice. When both the financial and cultural health of the company is failing, which should it focus on first? The simpler, more direct route was to close plants and lay off employees. Instead Webasto took an unconventional and more long-term approach to financial improvement by first resuscitating its failing culture.

In 2015 Webasto’s corporate culture was ranked among the “worst ever seen” by management consulting company McKinsey & Co. in their “Organizational Health Index.” Schramm, who at the time oversaw just finances, took over the HR role and inherited the sickly culture.

Departments didn’t communicate with each other, he said. They were focused on their own objectives rather than the broader and bigger goals of the organization. Putting out fires was more important than doing things right in the first place, which took a financial toll on the company. The support functions themselves were siloed and flawed, and that spilled out onto the plant floors and other parts of the organization.

“[A dysfunctional main organization] will lead, in every arm of the organization, to the same dysfunctional results,” Schramm said.

Webasto’s solution to building a new culture was separated into several phases. First, the company identified a road map of desired behaviors by asking every employee what their cultural priorities were. The guide, called “Our Compass,” was to be incorporated into the organization’s core values because it inherently included the cultural needs of all employees. Then, Webasto set out to create an environment that encouraged listening.

Meetings known as listening sessions resulted in crucial insights, Schramm said. A colleague, rather than a manager or executive, was trained to facilitate small-group discussions. This person would start a discussion among a large group of employees with a question like, “What are your hopes and fears at Webasto?”

A lot of valuable information came out of these discussions because the facilitator didn’t interrupt or comment on the discussion but instead let people talk. For example, an employee didn’t know a bereavement policy was in place, Schramm said. Because it was a listening session, the goal wasn’t about correcting the employee’s misunderstanding about available benefits but to listen and learn.

“It’s not on the colleague because he didn’t understand it,” Schramm said. “If he feels that way, then it’s our job as a management team to fix this and make it so clear that everyone in the organization understands it.”

The company also had to overcome employee distrust. Many colleagues had been with the company for almost 30 years. “What they’ve shared with me is, ‘I’ve seen so much already. It’s just another flavor of the month,’ ” Schramm said. They didn’t want to invest themselves in the process only to be disappointed.

Schramm relied on transparency to combat the dispirited attitude.

“I cannot ensure you this will work out,” he told employees. “But everything I can do and what I can influence I will do to drive this to success.”

The culture change project, which spanned from January 2015 to November 2016, provided positive results in a short period of time. Webasto did a re-survey with McKinsey’s OHI again in 2016 and came out with a score 18 points higher than before, the largest improvement McKinsey had seen in a 15-month period.

It also saw a drop in voluntary employee turnover. And, after being in a grim financial situation in 2014, Webasto’s U.S. operations returned to profitability by mid-2016.

Initiatives from the project continue today, and in November 2016 Webasto hosted and funded a three-day event called the Strategic Planning Summit in Detroit to discuss its past problems, celebrate its current successes and plan for the future.

“The summit was another advancement in Webasto’s way of listening to colleagues and engaging them in developing solutions to sustain momentum every day,” wrote Gwen Knapp, communications manager at Webasto Roof Systems Americas, in the company’s Optimas application.

Participants at the summit developed 20 ideas to improve business performance, Knapp said. Today there is a team responsible for helping advance implementation on these plans.

“Pushing the organization to achieve operational excellence without layoffs led to dramatic improvements both to culture and the bottom line,” she added.

Schramm likened Webasto’s renaissance to Detroit’s gradual improvement, which emerged from the Great Recession as a “broken city” and has slowly emerged as a city on the mend.

“We have evolved from the lessons learned from these hard times when we hit rock bottom, and came back up,” Schramm said.

For its workplace initiative, which demonstrates excellence in the Optimas categories of Business Impact, Managing Change, Innovation, Vision, Training, and Benefits, Webasto Roof Systems Americas is the 2017 Optimas Award winner for General Excellence.

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Posted on October 30, 2017June 29, 2023

General Assembly: Optimas Silver Winner for Corporate Citizenship

General Assembly is working with diverse groups to bring strong talent to its industry and open doors for underrepresented individuals.

Understanding the lack of diversity in tech fields, New York-based General Assembly partnered with tech giant Adobe to open the Adobe Digital Academy in 2016 to close the tech skills gap and bring more women and minorities into the field.

The academy works with nonprofits and minorities to educate them on web development and critical technology skills and gives them the experience to join the Adobe team and close the skills gap. Since 2016, Adobe has awarded 29 scholarships through General Assembly and eight full-time positions to students who went through the program.

Adobe Lightroom software engineer Vanessa Farias shared her experience going through the academy: “Adobe Digital and the LrW team supported me the whole way and gave me an opportunity to work toward a role at Adobe and that is invaluable.”

The experiences General Assembly and Adobe have given to people like Farias, along with training programs and job offers to diverse candidates, makes General Assembly the 2017 Optimas Award Silver winner for Corporate Citizenship.

Read about the rest of our 2017 Optimas winners here

Posted on October 26, 2017June 29, 2023

Not Everyone Is Open to the Open Office Space

Having recently completed my first video story “Modern Workspaces,” for Workforce, office space design has been constantly on my mind. So, it was valuable to come across a Twitter chat this month on trends in office design and see what other people had to say.  Although open office spaces gets a lot of love, others had strong opinions against open spaces that are worth noting.

Employees may feel distracted when they’re working so close to their coworkers with less personal space than they’re used to.

G&A Partners recently held this chat that allowed me to read HR pro’s praises and concerns about trends in office design. One Twitter user, @amoyal, wrote, “Don’t assume employees want flex space because it’s a trend. Ask them!”

You could say the same about any design trend. There are obviously some business/financial reasons for adopting a different type of office space, like the open office space. But what about the personal reasons? What about companies that just want to adopt a more open environment because it’s trendy? If you’re going to do something just to appeal to employees/job candidates, make sure they actually want it.

Some responses to the pitfalls of open plans included:

  1. Employees are more distracted because they want to chat with their neighbors and see what their coworkers are working on.
  2. Some types of people need isolation to focus and be productive.
  3. Increased competitiveness and pressure.
  4. No escape from certain coworkers’ behavior.

One user, Antonio Santos at @akwyz, mentioned that “#OpenOfficePlan is usually horrific for #neurodiverse employees,” so I asked him for more information on the topic. The article he sent me was fascinating.

It examines six potential barriers for neurodiverse employees in an open office plan and suggests some strategies to alleviate those barriers. Some examples of conditions that fall under that category include ADHD, autism, dyslexia, dyspraxia, Tourette syndrome, some mental health conditions and more. “What often seems unimposing and innocuous to the neurotypical employee can turn out to be a wolf in sheep’s clothing to the neurodiverse employee,” the article states.

Neurodiverse employees may be especially sensitive to light or background noise, making a sunny open space or a work station with distracting background noises (such as phones ringing and heavily used printers, shredders or photocopiers) difficult to work in.  Also distracting: when staff or visitors are constantly entering and exiting a door.

I mention this because, considering even employees who are not neurodiverse could easily be distracted by these stimuli, it should be obvious that neurodiverse employees find those distractions even more annoying or difficult to deal with.

Adding some practical light to this topic was Bonnie Scherry, director of corporate HR at G&A Partners. She helped plan the company’s headquarters in Houston. Although the office has an open layout, it also utilizes conference rooms and private rooms for employees who have different needs.

It’s wise to consider both the pros and the cons of the layout when you’re designing it, Scherry said. There are some things you can do to mitigate any challenges associated with the open plan, and you should address them as soon as possible in the planning process because it’s not a task you can easily redo.

She added that people involved in planning the design spoke to employees to gauge their concerns. Many design elements came out of this. For example, noise and privacy issues came up a lot among employees. “We spent a lot of time focusing on what we knew we could do to help out with those barriers,” said Scherry. “One of the things that we did is that our panels and our cubes absorb sound. We spent some extra time and money to make sure that we had something that would help absorb that sound rather than something that reverberates the noise.”

They also installed a white noise system to address noise concerns.

During this conversation, I had in mind many friends who simply dislike the open office idea because loss of personal space and similar concerns. Scherry had some advice on how to appease these types of employees.

First, the company first moved in and there was still some minor construction going on, they turned the white noise machines on higher than usual to make the transition easier. Second, Scherry said that most employees self-adjusted their voices in the new space. When they had tall cubicle walls, they were more likely to be louder. But when those cube walls became low, many employees lowered their voice.

Meanwhile, an informal conversation with loud employees can serve as a reminder to people who don’t self-adjust as easily.

[Also read: “Finding the Right Balance for Employees in Office Design”]
[Also read: “Millennials Opening the Doors to Communal Modern Workspaces”]

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Posted on October 4, 2017June 29, 2023

Sector Report: More Than an HR Database

In the world of HR management systems, the transition to the cloud is finally old news. While some companies are still waiting out their old on-site solutions, when they are ready to upgrade the path is clear, said Mike DiClaudio, principal in management consulting for KPMG in Detroit. “It is rare that you talk to an organization choosing an HR management system today that isn’t in the cloud.”

Thanks to the agility and rapid upgrades that are possible in the cloud, the new focus is on transforming the HRMS from a repository of information to a business management tool, he said. Vendors are rolling out artificial intelligence tools, machine learning, mobile apps and other automated features that are making it possible for customers to use their HR data to support business decision-making. Whether companies want to determine who deserves merit raises, help employees select the right benefits packages or let recruiters figure out where the best candidates come from, these tools promise to change the way employers and employees use an HRMS, DiClaudio said. “These tools are driving innovation in this space.”

Different vendors are taking different approaches. In 2016, for example, SAP SuccessFactors outlined plans to use machine learning to detect bias in every decision point of the talent life cycle, from hiring through succession. “We believe technology can help root out and eliminate bias, and promote more diversity and inclusion across the entire business,” said Mike Ettling, president of SAP SuccessFactors in a 2016 statement from the company.

Workday Inc. also is rolling out a series of employee engagement tools, such as the Opportunity Graph, which shows employees the transitions that others have made from their role, to help them identify potential career paths and training opportunities. “It harnesses the power of data to help them see what might be possible,” said Cristina Goldt, vice president of HCM products for Workday.

While some vendors are developing these tools in-house, industry experts, including DiClaudio and Josh Bersin of Bersin by Deloitte, believe the rise in advanced analytics and automation tools for HR will trigger another merger and acquisition spree. The industry has already seen a few deals, including Ultimate Software’s 2016 acquisition of Kanjoya, a predictive analytics solution provider; and ADP’s acquisition of the Marcus Buckingham Co., a cloud-based performance and talent management solution.

The buying trend is likely to continue as vendors look to expand their use of analytics, and to incorporate better survey tools, performance management features, and self-service tools. “The world of talent management is being disrupted by new technologies,” Bersin said. “There will always be the need for new innovations.”

Though unlike the past, much of the innovation in analytics technology are coming from big players, like IBM Watson and Blue Prism, which aren’t likely to be for sale. That may force HRMS vendors to partner rather than acquire to achieve their analytics goals, DiClaudio said. “It’s a highly competitive space that will require a lot of collaboration.”

Alexa for HR

Companies are also looking to their HRMS vendors to provide a better overall user experience that mimics the way employees engage with consumer sites. “The HRMS should be like Echo,” said Bersin, referring to Amazon’s voice-controlled intelligent assistant, Alexa. He envisions a future where such interactive technology will sit on top of the HRMS — and every other technology platform in the company — providing employees with a single environment to access all of their workplace software. “It won’t matter what system they are using, all they will see is that technology layer.”

For companies making HRMS buying decisions today, DiClaudio warns not to get too enamored with all the new features. He suggests companies look for alignment between their own strategic goals and the vendors’ technology road maps.

“You want your vendors to be able to scale with you,” he said. “These conversations should less about process and features, and more about how they are going to integrate the next great technology to support your business.”

Sarah Fister Gale is a writer based in the Chicago area. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on September 28, 2017August 15, 2018

Talent10x: Does Meritocracy Work?

This week’s episode of Talent Economy podcast Talent10x features Workforce‘s Rick Bell, Frank Kalman and Lauren Dixon, who discuss Lauren’s most recent story analyzing the state of meritocracy at work, the latest developments in CEO and business political and cultural activism, and news that Equifax fired its CEO.

https://soundcloud.com/user-745793386/talent10x

Listen here or subscribe to Talent10x on iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play or Tunein.

This podcast originally appeared on Workforce‘s sister publication, Talent Economy.

Posted on September 27, 2017June 29, 2023

Employers Embrace Telemedicine But Employees Exhibit Uncertainty

telemedicine

Lee Damiano felt ill one day in May 2015. The previous year when she signed up for her employer’s new telemedicine benefit that would allow her to contact a doctor any time, any day of the week, she thought she’d never actually use it.

She was wrong. Initially thinking, “I might as well wait until Monday,” Damiano ultimately called and was speaking to a doctor within 10 minutes. “As we went through the symptoms, the doctor encouraged me to go to the ER. I’m so glad I listened,” she said. “I had several pulmonary embolisms that could have been fatal over the weekend.”

Damiano, the senior vice president of Denver-based Westerra Credit Union, is now a big proponent of telemedicine for the organization’s 260 employees. “A number of things happen off hours and on the weekend,” she said. “It is critical to provide our employees cost-effective options.”

Westerra is one of many U.S. companies offering telemedicine, which is the usage of technology to deliver medical care that would otherwise be delivered on-site or in person. Telemedicine — a term that’s commonly used interchangeably with telehealth, although technically the words have slightly different meanings — can include texting, video and phone calls.

But despite employers’ newfound infatuation with it, employees don’t appear nearly as enamored. Only 3 percent of employees in the companies that offer telemedicine used those services in the first half of 2016, according to the National Business Group on Health’s “Large Employers’ Health Plan Design Survey.” Conversely, the same report found that 90 percent of the large employers offered the service in 2016.

As more employers look toward telemedicine as a low-cost, convenient alternative to an in-person visit for routine types of medical care, they’ll need to address skeptics’ concerns. Many employees are not accepting the technology as an appropriate substitute for in-person doctors with the same enthusiasm as their employers.

Meanwhile, some physicians remain neutral regarding telemedicine. Dr. Jack Resneck, professor and vice chair of dermatology at the University of California at San Francisco and an American Medical Association board member, said telemedicine is not something they are for or against.

“We see it as an additional tool that actually has great potential,” Resneck said. “This is an area we’re excited about. We just want to see it done right so patients get good quality care.”

 

Employee Utilization and Communication 

Although the trend for employers is rapidly increasing adoption of telemedicine, employees aren’t necessarily buying in as quickly, said Dr. Aamir Rehman, partner and senior clinical and total health management strategy consultant at Mercer. Growth is steadily increasing, but it’s still low.

A couple of factors may influence low utilization rates, Rehman said. In some cases, it’s simply informational. Employees might not know that their employer offers it.

Other employees may know it’s an option for them but feel more comfortable seeing a provider face to face. Rehman added they could be uncomfortable using telemedicine and have qualms or questions such as, Is this person a real doctor? How can this doctor tell what’s wrong with me without being in the same room?

“These are issues employees have brought up, and employers with a high utilization rate have succeeded in communicating and addressing these concerns,” said Rehman.

There are certain talking points for employers to focus on when communicating telemedicine, he added.

“If you can get me to the right provider at the right time, then the outcomes will be better. If you have a problem at midnight or it’s noon and you’re at work and (telemedicine) can take that hassle out of accessing health care, then the outcomes will be better. That is the primary message,” he said.

Clinical outcomes are often equal to that of a brick-and-mortar provider while costing less, said Rehman. It’s less expensive to access care through telemedicine than an office visit. On average, a telemedicine consultation costs $40 compared to $125 for an office visit.

About half of Westerra Credit Union’s workforce use telemedicine throughout the year, said Damiano. One important factor in getting that high usage was a robust communication strategy, especially during allergy season in the spring and flu season in the winter. This communication included giving instructions about using telemedicine and in which cases it should and should not be used.

The Alvin Independent School District in Alvin, Texas, also successfully uses communication strategies to increase utilization. Donnie Marek, director of risk management, runs a self-funded medical plan for the district, which employs about 3,000 people across 30 campuses.  “Any time you have a self-funded plan, you look for opportunities to slow down claims and provide better services for your employees,” he said.

The district began offering telemedicine in September 2014 through Teladoc Inc. after Marek researched opportunities to reduce claims. It averages a 21 to 25 percent monthly utilization rate, which is good for an organization of its size, he said. Communication is key to its success rate, he added.

“Our district was a very reactive district for health insurance. When I was hired I flipped that to be very proactive. [Employees] are constantly getting information from my office,” he said.

Marek sends out monthly emails to all employees, provides information to new hires and looks for employee testimonials with a positive experience with telemedicine. “If I get a good testimony from someone who has used it, I’ll ask them to write up a quote, and I’ll put it in the next blast that goes out. We’ve branded it well at our district,” said Marek. It’s also helped to have leadership buy-in from several school principals.

To communicate the telemedicine benefit to employees who still do not use it, Marek has other plans for the fall 2017 semester. He, along with one other person, will visit each campus throughout the calendar year and attend faculty meetings at the current 30 campuses, along with two more opening up this fall.

“We’ll talk about insurance and wellness, and telemedicine will be a huge part of the presentation. Getting in front of each employee in a smaller setting, they’ll listen,” he said. “I’m sure I’ll be blown away by how many people don’t know about it, simply because people still don’t read emails. I’m excited about this.”

 

 

Making the Practical and Ethical Choice

There are hundreds of telemedicine providers with varied focuses, said Richard Foust, chief business officer of Chicago-based laboratory diagnostics company Analyte Health.

When choosing a provider, “It’s important to ask questions about their approach to telehealth, because they’re all different,” he said. “If the HR manager is really thinking about what’s important, based on the size of the company and the employees they have, the decision will be different.”

Employers should question the telemedicine company’s growth, Foust said. Adding lab testing will become increasingly critical to a telemedicine company’s development since physicians would then be able to make decisions not only based off what they see and hear from the patient, but also medical facts that come back from a test.

Questioning quality is also important. “If I am going to be getting access to a physician at any point in time, how does that telehealth company ensure that I will get a good doctor?” said Foust. “And is that doctor part of a practice that readily reviews how they are treating patients, the outcomes they get and the feedback they receive?”

When an employer chooses a provider, it also has a responsibility to offer telemedicine ethically, said Resneck. “I’ve seen some things that have worried me and been challenging around some quality and patient-safety issues.”

The AMA released a set of guidelines for ethics in telemedicine in June 2016. It took three years for the AMA to develop the guidelines, which define a high standard of care to strive for in telemedicine.

“The area that’s concerned me the most is care coordination,” said Resneck. Care coordination — defined as “deliberately organizing patient care activities and sharing information among all of the participants concerned with a patient’s care to achieve safer and more effective care” by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality  — is an area where employers may fumble, said Resneck.

“In the employer market, we have seen a lot of employers reaching out and looking at this as a benefit for employees, which is great, but the temptation I think has been to take the thing that’s the easiest to scale up quickly,” he said. Sometimes what’s been the easiest to scale up has been telemedicine providers that provide fragmented care.

Resneck sometimes sees a patient using a telemedicine model where the provider of care doesn’t know who the patient is, doesn’t have their medical history and doesn’t share medical records after the virtual visit. Also, sometimes when a patient uses a telemedicine service to set up a consultation, the health plan may not cover a follow-up with the primary care physician they regularly see.

Large and midsized employers shopping for health insurance or working with health plans are in a unique position to drive the conversation. They have an opportunity to say, “If we are going to work with a health plan to include telehealth as a benefit, let’s sit down and talk with the health plan and talk about ways to cover this coordinated care,” Resneck said.

“If we saw employers pushing health plans to actually cover things like follow-up care with established physicians and care teams who know those patients, we could provide high-quality, coordinated care in a way that would be more efficient for patients,” he added.

Employers should also push for proper identification of the physician, he added. Patients should know who their physician is and what their credentials are when they are seeking out care via telemedicine. “We definitely see telehealth providers where that is the case and others where that is not the case,” said Resneck. Employers should encourage proper identification and transparency of credentials when they’re in talks with these health plans.

That all being said, doctors and physicians embrace innovation, he added, and they see incredible potential for telemedicine to improve patients’ access to care.

Westerra’s Damiano has seen this potential in her employees’ experiences. Many of them access the service off hours and avoid going to the ER for something that ends up being relatively minor, like an earache. Meanwhile, in her own experience, it’s meant something even more significant than one unnecessary ER visit. A pulmonary embolism, a sudden blockage of the major blood vessels in the lung, can be deadly.

“If I hadn’t called the doctor, I wouldn’t have gone to the hospital,” said Damiano. “It was a lifesaver for me.”

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below, or email at editors@workforce.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on September 12, 2017June 29, 2023

By the Numbers: Workplace Communications

Each month Workforce looks at important stats in the human resources sector. Here’s the topic we’re keeping an eye on for September 2017: workplace communications. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on September 7, 2017June 29, 2023

YourForce: We’re All Technology Companies Now

We are all technology companies now. Technology has taken over operations, marketing and sales at companies large and small.

We’re also all tech workers. From back-end systems that manage production to the front end that customers see, technology is impossible to extricate from work.

Human resources work is also tech work, the central theme of this issue of Workforce. Those who went into HR because they enjoy working with people now find themselves managing massive enterprise software systems and digital apps that administer benefits enrollment and deliver training.

But through it all, the human touch is essential. We’re not just tech companies. We remain people companies, too. The work of HR lies in making the most of the human resources that continue to make our digital future a reality.

—Mike Prokopeak, Editor in Chief

 

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

Benchmark Senior Living launched its “I’m Engaged” campaign that puts employees front and center on direct-mail pieces, videos and ads. The campaign spotlights employees who exceed expectations and devote themselves to helping others and their senior residents. Bottom photo, director of community relations Lauren Stowell poses during the photo shoot. By putting a unique spin on an engagement “announcement” — which included a professional photo shoot with each “star” employee — the company hopes to convey the commitment employees have with the work they do.

 

READER FEEDBACK

One reader responded to Rick Bell’s Last Word column titled, “Take it Easy on the Boss; There’s a World to Save” in the July/August edition. Mary Ellen Wasiellewski had this to say: 

There is a myriad of balls that must be kept in the air by the “captains of the ship.” They are the first to get blamed and the last to be acknowledged. Much has been written about the isolation at the top tier. The same human problems face the leaders who keep us all in employed positions: death, divorce, disease, burnout and chronic stress. What does HR do to support those high performance individuals who drive these ships during times of person adversity? They, too, are often expected to just show up and work through it.

Workforce.com/TheBoss 

 

Two readers commented on the Workforce July/August print story titled, “Contracting a Cure for Prescription Drug Costs.” F.R. Fogenberg wrote: 

Good article based on MBGH Annual Pharmacy Program, and more information from the National Employer Initiative on Biologic & Specialty Drugs for employer plan sponsors available at www.specialtyrxtoolkit.org.

Reader David Moll added: As a pharmacist of 26 years, I would love to help other companies that self-insure do the same type of thing as Caterpillar has done. I am very much familiar with how PBMs work and have resources to tap to build a network for companies large enough to support their own benefits.

Workforce.com/DrugCosts

 

A couple of readers chimed in on the Workforce July/August story titled, “Change Jobs to Trim the Fat.” Reader Eli1mxp stated: 

My company has a robust wellness program. They encourage us all to take steps to improve our health. I worked 13 hours yesterday. I don’t think I could do more.

HerHealthySelf responded to Eli1mxp, saying: That’s the conundrum most employees face — grinding hours, limp home, answer emails, crash in bed. Get up, rinse and repeat. Most people don’t work an eight-hour day anymore (and the shady looks you get if you don’t answer email while on vacation … sheesh), yet to read articles like this, you’d never know that was the reality.

Workforce.com/TrimTheFat

 

Reader Bill Fotsch offered his thoughts on the Workforce July/August story titled, “Beyond Great: Features of Today’s Legendary Companies:” 

I appreciate the author’s focus on successful companies. I have a different list of companies that have stood the test of time longer than the companies that he suggested. Southwest Airlines, Capital One and BHP Billiton and hundreds of private companies treat their employees like trusted business partners, enabling them to make more money for their company and themselves. They consistently see both profits and engagement soar.

Workforce.com/legendary

We welcome your comments on these stories and others on our website. Be sure to follow us and give us a shout on Twitter at @Workforcenews, too. Hope to hear from you!

Posted on August 23, 2017June 29, 2023

Think Less Is More With 401(k) Plan Participant Outcomes

Behavioral finance has taught us a lot in recent years about how people make decisions. Just as importantly, it has taught us how plan sponsors can help participants make better decisions while still providing them with choices.

However, providing people with too many choices can overwhelm them and lead to decision paralysis.

Limiting choices in decision-making can be effective when selling both ties and 401(k) plans.

I am reminded of a lesson I learned working part time in a men’s clothing store as a teenager. On my first day, the owner showed me around the store. When we got to the tie counter, he looked me in the eye and told me to never show more than three ties to a customer.

I was a bit confused and asked for clarification. Patiently, he explained I could show as many ties as needed to make the sale, but never have more than three on the counter at a time. More than that and the customer would likely have trouble making a decision.

So from that time on, I dutifully put only three ties on the counter. When the customer decided he did not like one, I would put it back in the case and, if needed, pull another one out but always being careful to limit the customer’s choice to three.

In recent years, this type of test has been tried under controlled conditions by academics. While three may or may not be optimal, limiting choices in decision-making has been proven effective.

So how can this be applied to the 401(k) plan?

Simplify the Investment Decision

No one believes that target-date funds are the optimal investment. After all, they are based on only one factor — a participant’s age. They do not take into account other holdings, risk tolerance or life expectancy, yet target-date funds have become one of the most popular investments in history. Why?

They are a simple way to get a professionally managed portfolio. All you need to decide is approximately when you expect to retire. Simple.

Participants who want to choose their own asset allocation can also benefit from simplification. After all, they are not investment professionals. So plan sponsors can help them by simplifying their decision-making.

Instead of offering large-cap, mid-cap, small-cap, value and growth, plan sponsors could consider offering one large-cap manager that covers both value and growth or consider offering a multi-cap fund that covers all of the above. Participants will have the benefit of diversification without having to know the difference between value and growth, large-cap and small-cap.

Make Joining the Plan Easier

Today, nearly half of all 401(k) plans have immediate eligibility. Plan sponsors can join this trend by eliminating complicated eligibility and entry dates. Instead of, “You are eligible for the plan after three months of service and will enter the plan on the next quarterly entry date after becoming eligible,” how about, “You will be enrolled in the plan beginning with your first paycheck?”

Companies worried about high employee turnover or increased cost of the match can address this by delaying match eligibility for a year, while still getting employees engaged in the plan immediately and simply.

Make the Plan Easier to Understand

Many participants struggle with understanding the employer’s matching contribution. Companies could address this by keeping the formula simple. For example, “We match 50 cents for each $1 you put into the plan up to X amount.” Complicated match formulas, even those designed to favor the lower-paid employees, can confuse people and result in lower participation.

People do not know how much they need to save in order to retire with adequate income replacement. Plan sponsors can help them.

If participants are auto-enrolled, be sure to include an auto-increase feature. Otherwise participant savings rates will be clustered at the auto-enrolled rate due to employees incorrectly assuming that they were enrolled at a rate that would put them on track for retirement.

Just as important, plan sponsors could provide participants with context for what is adequate savings. Consider this simple message: “Many experts believe that you need to save between 10-15 percent of your income in order to have enough money for retirement.”

This provides participants with concrete information on what will work rather than having them guess. Or consider delivering this message: “X of your peers save X percent in the plan.” The idiom of “keeping up with the Joneses” can be a powerful motivator for positive change.

Make Keeping Money in the Plan Easier

Most employers now understand that it is good for all participants if terminated participants leave their money in the plan. Larger plan assets can provide bargaining power to the employer resulting in lower fees for all participants, both terminated and active.

Terminated participants can also continue to benefit from professional oversight of the plan. However, terminated participants will not keep money in the plan if it is hard to withdraw when they need it.

A review of the distribution options may be necessary. Does the plan only allow for lump-sum distributions? This all-or-nothing option encourages, in fact requires, terminated participants to take all of their money out of the plan when they only need some of it. Installment payments could be added, enabling participants to receive monthly or quarterly distributions, while keeping the rest of their money in the plan.

A review of the investment options may be necessary. While a target date may be appropriate for many terminated participants, what options are provided for those looking for an alternative? Many retirees want a reliable way to generate income. Does the plan provide them with an attractive option?

The suggestions above are just a few of the ways to simplify a plan and make it more attractive to employees. None of these ideas create more risk or fiduciary liability for the plan sponsor. They engage participants more effectively, with a goal to improve potential outcomes. That is a win for everyone.

Don Stone is director, DC strategy and product development and senior consultant
at Pavilion Advisory Group. Comment below or email editors@workforce.com.

Posted on August 17, 2017June 29, 2023

Finding the Right Balance for Employees in Office Design

What’s your ideal work environment?

I posed this question to friends and family and got a variety of answers. A librarian’s assistant enjoyed her job mostly because in the hours spent shelving books, she could listen to music, did not have to interact with other people and was not bothered by the sun. Someone in the audio/video space sometimes felt disconnected from co-workers in his closed office but appreciated that space when knee-deep in the audio-editing process.

What’s your ideal work environment? Photo from West Elm.

Personally, I enjoy some mixture of outdoor space, where I can assess my notes in the sun, and indoor space, where I can lay out pages on a large table and make my own organized mess while I work. Cubicles are perfectly fine except for some tasks when it’s nice to get a change of scenery. Open workspaces are perfectly fine except for some tasks when I need seclusion.

Providing more variety in office spaces is a major theme in Workforce’s upcoming video story about modern workspaces. Human Capital Media video and multimedia producer Andrew Lewis and I visited the West Elm collection and spoke to Peter Fowler, the vice president of Workspace at West Elm.

Fowler caught us up on many trends in office design. Meanwhile, we also visited the Chicago office of health and wellness company Vitality, which modernized its office space two years ago. Todd Burman, vice president of quality, partners and risk at Vitality, talked us through their design process which meshed with many of the concepts Fowler brought up.

One important idea in these conversations was the rise of the open workspace — and how adopting that alone is not effective. In the extreme part of the open office trends, companies just took down walls, and eventually people figured out that didn’t work, said Fowler.

“At one point, we were getting rid of every closed office known to man,” he added. An exaggeration, yes, but the idea behind that holds true. Doing the total opposite of a closed office space isn’t the solution to problems of the closed office space.

The solution is balance, said Fowler. “Real estate is not getting any cheaper, and we have to be really clever with how we use space these days,” he said. So, as an employee’s personal space gets smaller, a clever solution could be to provide more spaces to work that fit different work needs, from quiet, more secluded spaces to open, collaborative areas.

Vitality strived to find the balance between a completely closed office and a completely open office when it redid its space, said Burman. His suggestions for balance were valuable to hear. Vitality utilized white noise makers and other sound abatement features so that people still felt some degree of privacy in open spaces. It also put people next to the resources that they would utilize the most. For example, it put wellness strategy managers, who spend all day on the phone with clients, next to small call rooms where they can have private conversations.

Another major takeaway from these interviews was the connection between design and employee well-being, which Workforce explored in our upcoming video story.

What’s been especially interesting, for me is comparing the ideas from these interviews with what studies have found. In theory, I like and agree with many of these concepts. But if a company is to shift their office design specifically to appeal to employees, the impact on employees matters.

For example, a recent report looked at the impact activity-based working environments, or ABWs, have on employee behavior. An ABW is “based on the premise that no employee ‘owns’ or has an assigned workstation. Rather, the broader workspace provides employees with a variety of predetermined activity areas that allow them to conduct specific tasks including learning, focusing, collaborating and socializing.”

This is like the extreme version of what Burman and Fowler discussed, where personal space was shrinking but at the same time employees had more times of communal spaces to choose from.

Leesman, an independent assessor of workplace effectiveness, found that many ABWs have employees with traditional work styles, meaning they stay in one place rather than use multiple settings. Yes, allowing all this alternative space was good in theory, but people might not be using these separate work settings as planned.

“This may be because the nature of their role doesn’t require them to work in a mobile way; or it could be because the physical, virtual and cultural infrastructure does not actively encourage the appropriate mobility behavior,” said research company Leesman CEO Tim Oldman in an email statement.

Taking all this into account, the question becomes, how do you motivate employees to use your new, modern space when you’ve gone through a redesign? What if their jobs don’t easily allow them to make that switch throughout the day? How can a company make something trendy and potentially effective for employees into something practical and actually effective?

I don’t have the answer, but I imagine that cultural infrastructure Oldman hinted at above plays a big role.

What has your experience been with open office plans and how employees have adjusted to them? Feel free to share in the comment section below.

[Please read: “Some Offices Designing Ways to Help Employees Move”]

Andie Burjek is a Workforce associate editor. Comment below, or email at editors@workforce.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

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