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Author: Michelle Rafter

Posted on March 22, 2015June 29, 2023

Laszlo Bock: Just Google Him

Laszlo Bock photo provided by Google Inc.

If Google Inc. is a pioneer of people analytics, Laszlo Bock is guiding the wagon train.

Bock, 42, is the Internet giant’s senior vice president of people operations. Google dabbled with using data for hiring and other people practices before Bock joined the company nine years ago. Since then, the former General Electric Co. human resources executive and McKinsey & Co. consultant has helped elevate Google’s people-related number-crunching to world-class levels. He did it by applying the rigorous testing Google previously reserved for refining search algorithms and rolling out new products to how it hires, trains, manages and promotes.

The results have bordered on revolutionary.

People analytics helps Google process some 3 million applications annually to find the crème de la crème, the quarter of 1 percent of candidates who eventually are hired for their skills, aptitude and ability to fit into the company’s culture, a trait insiders call “Googliness.”

By using data analysis and testing to streamline hiring and other personnel moves, Google has seen its people operations group’s productivity rise 6 percent annually over the past five years. Today, the company’s HR staff delivers more services more efficiently at 73 percent of the cost structure it had in 2011 on a per-employee basis. That’s despite supporting 53,600 employees and hiring up to 5,000 people a year, all without outsourcing or increasing its use of vendors or consultants.

Google’s data-based workforce breakthroughs have landed the Internet giant at or near the top of U.S. and multinational best companies to work for lists four years running. Those designations are based as much on employees’ attitudes toward their managers, co-workers and workplace as on the company’s generous benefits and perks.

All this points back to Bock, a self-described nerd who hasn’t outgrown his love of video games and comic books, and who’s more Bruce Banner than Hulk, his favorite character. Colleagues and acquaintances describe him as an intellectually curious leader who loves research and puts growth and development ahead of ego and image, all while managing to be witty and fun.

“He’s passionate about making work better, and as a result, he invests a great deal of time and energy inside and outside Google disseminating knowledge,” said Adam Grant, a Wharton School management professor and author who has collaborated with Bock on various Google projects.

An Insider’s View of Google’s People Practices

You’ve probably never heard of Google employees’ revolt over meatless Mondays or the pie that set off an internal debate about Tibetan independence.

Barring some notable exceptions, Google Inc. has been famously closed-mouthed about its people practices — until now.

Laszlo Bock, the search engine giant’s senior vice president of people operations, peppers his new book, “Work Rules!” with previously untold details about how Google manages its 53,600-person workforce.

Being tight-lipped is the flip side of how transparent the company is with employees, Bock said in an interview with Workforce.

Google operates by a bottom-up mentality born of an engineering and software developer heritage that values ideas and innovation, regardless of where they come from. Among other things, that means sharing some of the company’s most sensitive software code with new employees from their first week on the job, and holding weekly Q&A sessions where anyone can ask top executives anything.

Under those circumstances, “the easiest way to not screw up something that’s highly confidential is to be very careful about what you share” with outsiders, Bock told Workforce.

In “Work Rules!” Bock gives readers an unheralded peek behind the curtains, “with a goal that lots of people and companies try it and imitate it,” he said.

Many perks Google is famous for offering are worth imitating and cost the company nothing. Vendors of on-site dry cleaning, haircuts and bike repairs willingly set up shop inside its offices because of the money they can make, Bock said. The point of offering such services isn’t to make people work longer hours, Bock writes in the book. “We do all this because it’s (mostly) easy, rewarding, and it feels right.”

That culture of transparency means employees police themselves. When Google switched to meatless Mondays in two of its 22 cafeterias in 2010, a debate erupted with a protest barbecue in reaction to the more limited meal choices and perception that the company was mandating an ethos that eating meat was unhealthy, Bock writes. A small minority who didn’t like the policy ransacked break rooms, threw forks away and mistreated kitchen staff. One anonymous employee wrote: “If you don’t want to provide us the traditional food benefit, then shut all the cafés down. Seriously stop this sh** or I’ll go to Microsoft, Twitter or Facebook where they don’t f*** with us.” 

When Bock read the note at an all-hands meeting at the end of the monthlong experiment, “the room froze,” he writes. Most employees weren’t aware there was a problem and were appalled by their co-workers’ behavior. Many weighed in with support via email, meetings and private notes. Eventually the abuse and entitlement fell away. “The mores had shifted,” he writes.

Operating a business that empowers employees can lead to other internal tensions. In 2008, a company chef’s posting of a “Free Tibet Goji Chocolate Crème Pie” on the day’s menu went viral as Googlers debated for and against a Tibet free from Chinese rule, and for and against employees’ rights to freedom of speech, not realizing the chef’s intention was merely to indicate that, like all other food at Google, the pie was free of charge.

In the hours that followed, at least one employee threatened to quit if the company didn’t take action, according to the book. Workers’ internal messages about the pie set a record for the fastest time to reach more than 100 responses on a single topic, and then became the first to break 1,000. The chef was initially suspended from work for three days, but recalled the next day after Bock dug into the situation. The debate was important, he writes, “and sparking a debate should never be a crime.”

“Human beings are complicated, thorny, messy things,” Bock writes. “But those unquantifiable qualities are also what makes magic happen.”

—Michelle V. Rafter

True to that characterization, Bock shares what he’s learned in a new book, “Work Rules! Insights from Inside Google That Will Transform How You Live and Lead,” which was scheduled to be released earlier this month.

Google’s perks and efforts to develop better managers have been well-documented over the years. However, according to Bock, “Work Rules!” includes never-before-shared insider details and anecdotes. Among them, how employees — who call themselves “Googlers” — practically waged war over meatless Mondays and a goji berry chocolate pie.

In a Workforce interview, Bock said he was motivated to write a book after being asked about Google’s hiring, perks and people practices by everyone from business partners to visitors touring the $65.8 billion company’s Mountain View, California, headquarters.

“There’s a lot more science and rigor that could be brought to how companies think about people in service of making people happier and living more productive lives,” Bock said. “The book is an attempt to encapsulate that.”

Data-Driven

The Google of today may seem like an unstoppable force with tentacles extending into every corner of the Internet economy, but the company’s standing as a tech powerhouse wasn’t always a foregone conclusion. When Bock joined Google in 2006, the then-8-year-old company was still a startup in many ways, one of multiple search engines of the era and fewer than 11,000 employees.

Bock, the son of Romanian immigrants who fled to the United States to escape dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, got an MBA from Yale University and then joined McKinsey. While there, he switched to HR because it was an undervalued practice area that could help him stand out in a sea of management consultants. He also saw it as the best way to influence how companies treated people. As he details in “Work Rules!” colleagues thought he was “committing professional suicide.”

Bock’s first in-house HR job was at GE in compensation and benefits. After three years, he was recruited to lead Google’s HR operations. It turned out to be a perfect fit. Google was and is an engineering and numbers-focused company, with close to 40 percent of employees in research and development. One reason Bock was attractive to the company “was because he had the same bent,” said Hal Varian, Google’s chief economist, who sits in on a weekly staff meeting with Bock.

Bock said Google’s analytics-driven approach to problem-solving appealed to him. When it comes to things like managing people, “We all believe in our hearts we’re good at it, we’re good with teams, with partners, but by definition we’re just average at it,” he said. “My thoughts were, if I think there’s a better way to do it, I better be able to prove it.”

From 25 Interviews to Four

Hiring was among the first activities to get a Bock makeover. By the mid-2000s, Google executives’ goal of finding candidates who meshed with the culture meant filling open positions could take six months. Candidates went through 15 to 25 interviews each, a process that took 250 hours of employee time. Executives averaged a day a week on hiring.

To change that, Bock had a doctorate analyst on his staffing team study the process. The analysis showed that four interviews were enough to predict candidate success with an 86 percent confidence rate. Google trimmed time to hire to 47 days. According to “Work Rules!” by trimming interviews and streamlining in other ways, the time the average Google employee spent a week on hiring-related activities dropped from four to 10 hours in 2008, when the company had approximately 20,000 employees, to 1½ hours in 2013, when the company’s head count was twice as large.

Other hiring practices changed as well. In the early years, Google favored Ivy League graduates and requested SAT scores and college transcripts. The company dropped the practice after concluding academics didn’t predict job performance beyond a few years out of college. At the same time, the company moved to an internal recruiting team and more standardized screening process. It also rigorously prepped employee interviewers based on the performance of employees who did the best job of picking candidates who went on to become successful hires.

Bock stopped using job boards in 2012 after determining the low number of hires that came from them didn’t justify the expense. Everyone who interviews, including candidates who don’t make the cut, takes a post-interview survey to collect feedback that is used to refine the process. According to Bock in his book, the interview process works so well, “today even 80 percent of candidates who interviewed at Google and were rejected say they would recommend a friend apply.”

That might be because Google takes its hiring seriously. It spends twice as much of its people budget on hiring than the average company, according to Bock, guided by the philosophy that the better job Google does to begin with, the fewer resources will have to be spent rehabilitating underachievers or replacing people who don’t work out. “Making sure our people are developing is not a luxury,” Bock writes in “Work Rules!” “It’s essential for our survival.” Neither he nor a Google spokeswoman would disclose the size of company’s people operations budget or its staff.

Hiring isn’t the only area that Bock has refined. As Google has grown, Bock has taken advantage of its size to test new methods for training, managing and conducting performance reviews, sometimes trying innovations out on several hundred workers before expanding to larger segments or the entire employee population.

Addressing Diversity

For all of its progress, women and minorities are underrepresented in Google’s workforce and in mid- and upper management. Women comprise 30 percent of the company’s workforce worldwide, and hold just 17 percent of the technical jobs. Of the company’s 36 executives and top-ranking managers, only three are women. At the board level, only three of 11 members are women.

Ethnic diversity is equally problematic. In the United States, Google’s workforce is 61 percent white, 33 percent Asian, 3 percent Hispanic and 2 percent black.

The company has taken steps to rectify that. People operations studies of women in technical and product management jobs showed they’re less likely to nominate themselves for promotions than men, but when they do, they’re promoted at slightly higher rates, Bock writes in “Work Rules!” The company found that circulating an email to technical employees explaining promotion statistics by gender and level was enough of a “nudge” to prompt women to promote themselves at the same rate as men.

More recently, Google has been conducting workshops to help create a more inclusive culture. By early February, more than half its workforce had gone through a unconscious bias program, Bock told Workforce. To encourage kids to look at STEM careers, Google supports historically black colleges and elementary schools, as well as Bay Area schools and groups serving largely low-income, immigrant populations.

“The reality is, it’s a decadelong problem to solve,” Bock said. It would be easy to improve ethnic diversity by hiring underrepresented minorities away from other tech companies, “but that would not be the best story for us,” he said. “There’s more to come on this in coming months. Stay tuned on that front.”

Authenticity — and a Pancake Recipe

Running the people side of a technology innovator isn’t always serious business. At least it’s not always serious for a guy with a collection of 8,000 to 10,000 comic books, the same guy who included a pancake recipe in a book on management.“Never having written a book before, I wanted to write one I’d enjoy reading,” he said.

His manager rating, however, was no laughing matter. Bock said he was terrified when he shared results of his manager rating with direct reports after the people operations organization created the much-written-about Project Oxygen program. As part of the program to build better managers, employees provide anonymous feedback about their bosses. His first go-round, Bock’s score was 77 percent favorable across 15 questions, which was near the bottom. He scored especially low for telling people how they were performing, prompting him to give his staff clearer feedback and travel more to meet with his extended team. Over time, those actions helped boost his scores and made the team happier and function better, according to his account in the book.

The Trouble With HR

Bock maintains he wouldn’t have been hired as a senior executive at a company with a traditionally run HR department because he lacked the required background.

“When I was at GE, I remember talking to another company, and they said you’ve only been in compensation for two years, you couldn’t be a generalist,” Bock told Workforce. “There’s myopia about the skill set people have to have. We’re supposed to be the experts; we should be better at letting people stretch and grow.”

It’s one of several criticisms Bock levels against the HR status quo in “Work Rules!” calling it the department “where you park the nice people who aren’t delivering elsewhere” and “not usually where the cool kids are.”

At Google, only a third of people operations staff have typical HR backgrounds. Another third come from generalist business consulting firms, and the rest are trained in analytics-related fields such as psychology physics.

It’s a classic Google move to build a team that’s bigger than the sum of its parts, one that can learn from data-based experiments, adapt to innovation and improve efficiencies without consuming additional resources.

As more companies redo talent management practices to add people analytics and other HR big data, Bock could continue to ride at the head of the pack.

“People have been managing people for tens of thousands of years. Doing it isn’t a new field,” Bock said. A lot of what Google has done is take what seems to work elsewhere, “and then we prove it and refine it.”

Posted on June 1, 2014June 20, 2018

Making the Most of Mobile

Photo courtesy of Thinkstock.

Give employees the choice of using a smartphone or desktop computer to see paycheck or benefits information and mobile technology wins hands down.

When employees can use a smartphone to look up a paycheck or confirm a copayment for a doctor’s visit on a mobile-friendly website, 37 percent do. By comparison, when employees have to access the same data from a Web portal and desktop or laptop computer, only 23 percent use it, according to an Automatic Data Processing Inc. Research Institute report.

The report is based on analysis of 2 million employees at 25,000 U.S. companies that use both ADP’s Web- and mobile-based paycheck and benefits services and 25,000 that use only the Web-based service. The report was released in late February based on data collected in May 2013.

Years after HR departments first started using mobile to find and recruit potential employees, more are integrating it into internal workforce management functions as well.

Mobile-device users average 7.2 page views a month looking up information such as gross pay or withholdings.

It shouldn’t be a surprise given Americans’ obsession with all things mobile. Today, 90 percent of U.S. adults own a cellphone, and 58 percent own a smartphone, according to a February Pew Research Center study titled “The Web at 25 in the U.S.”

Mobile-device users average 7.2 page views a month looking up information such as gross pay or withholdings, and 4.1 page views a month checking medical, vision or dental coverage, as well as benefits such as flexible spending and health savings accounts and long-term disability, the ADP report states.

Based on additional mobile-based HR processes that ADP provides and monitors, employees use iPhones, Androids and other smartphones even more frequently to punch in and out of work, request time off, view their W-2s and access a corporate directory, said Roberto Masiero, vice president and head of ADP’s Innovation Lab, which also produces the company’s widely read monthly employment report. “Once they’ve used mobile, they don’t go back,” he said.

Companies especially rely on mobile to connect with younger workers. At MyCorporation, a Calabasas, California-based business that helps companies incorporate, roughly 20 percent of 42 employees use their phones to look up 401(k) account and company match information. “We’re a young group, so encouraging the team to focus on saving and planning for the future via simple, mobile tools is a true win-win,” said Deborah Sweeney, MyCorporation’s CEO.

At retail chain Aéropostale, employees use Ceridian’s Dayforce HCM mobile app to view work schedules, update their availability and swap shifts. “For Aéropostale’s vast, part-time workforce comprised of high school and college students, mobile scheduling has empowered employees to work on their time,” a spokesperson said.

It’s not just younger workers, or employees in retail or services industries, using mobile devices to look up their HR and benefits records. In its report, ADP found employees in such industries as construction, mining, natural resources, manufacturing and hospitality are just as likely to use mobile devices to look up information.

Michelle V. Rafter is a Workforce contributing editor.  Comment below or email editors@workforce.com. Follow Workforce on Twitter at @workforcenews.

Posted on June 5, 2011June 20, 2018

Tips for Managing Mobile Workers

remote work

How do you make the most of a mobile workforce? Here are some recommended best practices from consultants and managers of mobile employees:

• Keep the conversation going. Set up regular conference calls between managers and team members. Malcolm Gilvar, executive vice president of sales for the Trade Group, a Carrollton, Texas-based trade show marketing and display company, who oversees 22 sales reps in five locations, checks in with his team weekly, and three top salespeople lead conference calls with smaller groups in between. Even with all of that talking, it’s harder to keep tabs on mobile workers than in-house sales reps, and Gilvar estimates turnover among his remote employees is up to 25 percent higher than for other staff members. “You can’t have that daily interaction that builds a team,” he says.

• Get to know each other. The Trade Group brings new sales reps who will be working remotely to the company’s Dallas headquarters for two to four weeks of training to indoctrinate them in the company’s culture. Other companies host annual employee get-togethers.

• Collaborate online. Facebook-like tools that allow for online work group collaboration inside a company’s firewall are proliferating, including Salesforce.com Inc.’s Chatter, Rypple and Yammer. Sara Sutton Fell, founder and CEO of jobs referral website FlexJobs, uses Yammer and other collaboration tools in lieu of email or instant messages to communicate with remote employees.

• Put it in writing. When Razorfish, the $317 million online ad agency that Microsoft Corp. owned through October 2009, sent some employees to work, it licensed online-based mobile workforce management training courses that the software giant developed for its own supervisors. The agency also created a page on its intranet where employees can find mobile workforce policies and get tips on setting up an ergonomic office, FedEx account and more. Managers use a list of questions called a “virtual workplace commitment document” to make sure remote workers understand what’s expected of them, says Mardi Douglass, the company’s employee services director.

• Ask lots of questions. Because managers can’t see remote employees, they need other techniques to determine when something’s wrong. Fraser Marlow, marketing vice president and head of research for BlessingWhite Inc., a Skillman, New Jersey, human resources training company, says asking probing questions during a phone call is the equivalent of asking an employee out to lunch.

• Make workplaces safe. Companies can run into workers’ compensation issues if home-based employees develop injuries from improperly positioned chairs, desks or other ergonomically unfriendly setups. Consultants recommend creating ergonomic policies for home offices, or requiring employees to take pictures of their home-based workspaces so that HR can sign off on the setup.

• Prep the information technology help desk. While many mobile workers can maintain their own home-office Internet connections, others need more hand-holding.

• Take security and privacy precautions. With more people working outside the office and carrying sensitive company data on laptops, smartphones or flash drives, security “has become a greater concern for employers,” says Greg Harper, president of Runzheimer International, the Waterford, Wisconsin-based mobile workforce research and consulting firm. In virtual workplace contracts or documentation, employers should include precautions employees are expected to take to keep company equipment and information safe. Pinstripe Inc., a 250-person recruitment process outsourcer in Brookfield, Wisconsin, gives remote employees access to sensitive corporate materials through a secure Web-based document sharing service “instead of people keeping them on their local drives,” says Angela Hills, the company’s executive vice president.

Workforce Management Online, June 2011 — Register Now!

Posted on February 18, 2011August 9, 2018

One Year Later Merged Peopleclick Authoria Weathers Changes

Charles S. Jones is frank about what went wrong at Peopleclick Authoria last year.


After the private equity fund that Jones runs acquired Peopleclick for $100 million in January 2010 and merged it with Authoria, the company brought in an outside manager to oversee the integrated recruiting and talent management systems vendor. It was a bad move.


In ensuing months, an undisclosed number of former Peopleclick and Authoria employees grew dissatisfied with CEO Joe Licata’s management style and quit or announced plans to leave, according to Jones, analysts and other industry observers familiar with the situation.


On the product side, the newly merged company’s competitors hogged the spotlight and won vendor competitions despite analysts’ assessments that Peopleclick Authoria’s products were just as good.


Things came to a head in November when Licata left and Jones stepped back in as CEO, a job he’d held briefly after the merger was announced. Since then, Jones, who is also Peopleclick Authoria’s chairman, has focused on righting the listing business, rehiring at least 13 ex-staffers and issuing stock options to each of the company’s 540 employees.


“If I could be utterly candid, I was called back because it restored confidence in the business and its mission,” Jones told Workforce Management in a phone interview from the company’s Waltham, Massachusetts, office.


Licata could not be reached for comment.


The changes at Peopleclick Authoria don’t end with the leadership shake-up. Jones confirms that Bedford Funding, the $800 million White Plains, New York, private equity firm that owns the company, is negotiating to buy an unnamed human resources technology business in a deal expected to close in the first half of 2011. Industry analysts have speculated that an e-learning provider would make a good acquisition since it fills a hole in the company’s existing product line. Jones agrees, but declined to disclose additional details pending the acquisition’s formal announcement.


If such a deal materializes, it will be the latest of more than a dozen mergers and acquisitions in the talent management market in 2010 and the first quarter of 2011. Merger and acquisition activity is blistering as companies fill out product offerings to increase their share of a talent management market that analyst Bersin & Associates predicts will grow 15 percent this year to $3 billion.


Fueling the spending on talent management software tools is a resurgent economy and growing recognition by companies that people management plays a key role in bottom-line results. The buzzing market makes for a volatile industry landscape.


“On any day, any vendor could be in play,” says Lisa Rowan, technology researcher IDC’s longtime HR analyst.


Despite the potholes, 2010 wasn’t an entirely bad year for Peopleclick Authoria. According to Jones, the company successfully merged former Peopleclick and Authoria operations and sales teams and is hiring people for research and development, sales, and sales support positions; a national jobs board lists 29 openings.


Efforts to cross-sell Peopleclick’s recruiting systems and Authoria’s talent management systems are coming to fruition. The number of customers buying products from both platforms rose 50 percent in the past year, Jones says, and includes clients such as Citrix Systems, the virtualization software vendor.


That’s proof that by aggregating product lines, the company is better equipped to take on competitors such as SuccessFactors and Taleo, Jones says. Others agree.


“Peopleclick Authoria is one of the success cases for a merger in our industry,” says Elaine Orler, president of Talent Function Group LLC, a San Diego-based staffing and recruiting consultant. “They were very prescriptive about how the organizations would be structured together and the teams involved were very active in making the merger a success for the customers.”


The company’s strategy got a major vote of confidence in June 2010. After an industry-wide search spanning several months, Mercer LLC, the $3.3 billion HR outsourcer, technology and consulting company, said it was tapping Peopleclick Authoria to provide talent management functions for a new human capital management products and services platform called Human Capital Connect.


Though the partners haven’t disclosed any customers, Jones says deals in the pipeline will add “millions” to Peopleclick Authoria’s revenue, which closed 2010 at approximately $83 million. Peopleclick Authoria’s internal turmoil did not shake Mercer’s faith in the company, says Kim Seals, Mercer’s global leader of human capital operations and technology solutions practice.


“Charles Jones has been a champion of Mercer Human Capital Connect from the beginning and actively worked with us to define the offering,” she says. “The continuity of Charles’ leadership and (Peopleclick Authoria’s) management execution has ensured that there was no impact with the exit of Mr. Licata.”


In another partnership announced last fall, the company teamed with Brad Smart to incorporate the “topgrading” innovator’s employee ranking system into its recruiting, performance, succession planning and compensation software.


Peopleclick Authoria is already pitching the partnership to customers and in ads on its website. But Jones says it will take another six months to completely weave into its product line the system that Smart, an industrial psychologist and management consultant, has developed. The process uses in-depth interviews, meticulous reference checks and other hiring techniques to identify and advance “A” players, redirect or retrain “B” and “C” players and dump employees seen as deadbeats.


Through good times and bad, Jones and Peopleclick Authoria have had the support of Bedford Funding, which is making human capital management vendors the focus of its investment portfolio. They’ve also had the approval of PSP Investments, the $50 billion Canadian government pension fund investment manager that poured tens of millions into Bedford Funding so the equity firm could buy Authoria in 2008 and Peopleclick two years later.


Mark Boutet, communications and government relations vice president at the Montreal-based firm, wouldn’t comment on specific investments. But since the relatively new fund won’t start paying out benefits until 2030, it’s made long-term commitments to all its investments.


“No matter what happens in the market, we aren’t forced to sell any assets,” he says.


To rectify Peopleclick Authoria’s marketing and public relations deficits, Jones plans to hire an HR-industry public relations firm effective March 1 and is simultaneously launching the company’s first social media marketing campaign. He also re-hired Christian Merhy, Authoria’s former senior director of marketing, to take over as the company’s marketing vice president.


On Jones’ first day back on the job in November, he expanded an existing stock option plan to cover Peopleclick Authoria’s entire workforce so everyone would be as motivated as top managers to help the company succeed.


In his first brief stint as CEO immediately after the merger, Jones divided his time between Peopleclick Authoria and Bedford Funding. Today he is completely focused on running Peopleclick Authoria while other Bedford Funding partners attend to fund business, and he doesn’t expect that to change.


“I like this place, and since I own it, I have no intention of firing myself,” he says.
 


Workforce Management Online, February 2011 — Register Now!

Posted on December 8, 2010June 29, 2023

The Yawning of a New Era

America’s workforce is weary. Employees of all ages report feeling fatigued, stressed, burned out or depressed, brought down by a heavier workload, layoffs and an assortment of other adverse conditions workers feel they have little or no power to control.


In a recent study, 81 percent of human resources managers agreed that employee fatigue is a bigger problem than in years past. According to a Workforce Management and WorkForce Software survey of 820 U.S. companies, the major culprits are reduced head count, lack of boundaries between home life and work, second jobs and a culture of “wanting to do it all.”


It’s a perfect storm of employers cutting their workforces as far as they can and workers being stretched as far as they can, says Marc Moschetto, WorkForce Software’s vice president of marketing. “Doing more with less is a pretty unsustainable model.”



In a separate survey of U.S. and Canadian workers, more than half of the 794 people polled reported feeling fatigued at the end of the work day, and at least 40 percent of all age groups said their jobs made them depressed. Yet because of the weak job market, employees are afraid to talk about how tired they are, says Mario Canseco, a vice president at Vision Critical, the Vancouver, British Columbia-based pollster that conducted the survey. “You don’t want to be perceived as someone who’s not doing more than you should, even without a raise, because you don’t want to lose your job.”


Indeed, a secretary at a Sacramento, California, agency—who requested anonymity in this article for fear of being retaliated against for discussing conditions at her workplace—says a state-imposed furlough ordered because of the recession effectively cut 15 percent from her salary. Further, budget cuts reduced her agency’s staff to a skeleton crew, leaving more work for those left behind. “I can’t remember the last time I went out for lunch. I bring my lunch and eat at my desk,” she says.


The secretary says her agency wanted to promote her, but a statewide promotions freeze means she has assumed the new position while remaining in her previous job classification and pay grade. She can’t even go home and pour her troubles out to her husband because he’s in the same boat, she says, working 10-hour days “and coming home late and exhausted.”


The animosity directed at California government workers during a protracted and often ugly state budget process only added to civil servants’ stress levels, the secretary says.


“The constant uncertainty, fights in the court, our employer vilifying us, it’s been awful. It’s that more than the monetary losses that are getting us down.”


Some companies have figured out ways to keep employees’ spirits and energy up during down times. For example, Xonex Relocation, a New Castle, Delaware, relocation services company, says it realizes its employees are under added stress with many people making work-related moves. “Every day we’re dealing with people at their very worst, and the last two years it’s gotten worse,” says Bill Humphrey, the company’s senior vice president and managing director.


As a result, Xonex bars employees from working through their lunch hour or even eating lunch at their desks.


The company has mandated other stress reducers, including the “sunset rule.” Every day before quitting time, the company’s customer-service agents must phone clients with a move update, so there’s no unfinished business hanging over employees’ heads when they go home. The company sells the end-of-day check-in as a special feature for clients, but it’s really about giving employees’ peace of mind, Humphrey says. “I don’t want them going home and picking their kids up from soccer and thinking of the calls they didn’t make. It’s a very beloved thing here. Everyone commits to making those calls.”


Workplace fatigue isn’t new, of course, but it’s receiving more attention as employers keep their overburdened staffs lean. It’s also in the spotlight because of high-profile accidents in recent years caused by sleep-deprived workers as well as federal and industry regulations meant to reduce employee fatigue.


One of those accidents happened in February 2009, when a Colgan Air Inc. crew flying for Continental Airlines crashed outside Buffalo, New York, killing 50 people. Federal aviation investigators blamed the accident on pilot error but said that fatigue hurt performance, too.


Fatigue also has been cited in several high-profile trucking accidents in recent years, including a 2009 accident in which a 76-year-old driver hit several vehicles and killed 10 people on an Oklahoma highway. In its investigation, the National Transportation Safety Board said acute sleep loss, shift work and mild sleep apnea contributed to driver fatigue that caused the crash.


In October, the transportation safety board recommended that trucking companies adopt fatigue management programs, which could include such things as screening and treating sleep disorders, scheduling with safety concerns in mind, and installing video and data recorders to collect information in the event of an accident.


Similarly, last year the Nuclear Regulatory Commission required nuclear power plants to minimize fatigue, including creating policies such as giving employees the right to say they’re too tired to safely perform their work and strictly monitoring hours worked. Facilities that fail to comply risk being shut down by the nuclear agency. “It’s not like turning off your light switch; it’s millions of dollars to go through the power-up and power-down cycle,” says WorkForce Software’s Moschetto, whose company sells software that power plants use for shift scheduling purposes.


Speaking at a national safety convention in October, Occupational Safety and Health Administration assistant secretary of labor David Michaels told reporters that he had no plans to create a standard for employee fatigue but expects companies to address it as part of their injury and illness prevention programs.


In the health care field, there has been a movement afoot to modify the back-to-back shifts that residents, nurses and other medical providers often work.


In recent years, a handful of states have passed laws banning mandatory double shifts for nurses, nurses’ aides and other medical-care providers. Pennsylvania passed such a law in July 2009, five years after a University of Pennsylvania study showed that the risk of medical error was as much as three times higher when a nurse worked a shift of 12½ hours or longer. A separate Pennsylvania Health Department study showed that 13.6 percent of the state’s registered nurses had worked mandatory overtime within two weeks of taking the survey.


Pittsburgh’s Allegheny General Hospital got a head start on the state regulation. When the 661-bed facility negotiated a union contract in 2003, it banned mandatory double shifts for its approximately 1,200 nurses. A few years before, Allegheny General had gone through bankruptcy reorganization in the middle of a national nursing shortage. Staffing was down, and RNs were routinely asked to work overtime. “It was a huge issue people were upset about,” says John Ziegler, an RN who has been with Allegheny


General 20 years and was previously president of a union that represents its nurses. “It’s totally disruptive. It doesn’t matter if you know six hours ahead of time. If you have child care issues or standing plans, you have to scramble to arrange around it.”


Banning mandatory overtime and limiting the number of patients monitored at any one time made nurses happier and improved the hospital’s bottom line, says Judy Zedreck, Allegheny General’s vice president of nursing. The year before the 2003 union contract took effect, the hospital had paid temp nursing agencies for 140,000 hours of labor. At least part of that total was to cover for staff nurses dealing with fatigue and burnout. By 2009, the number of temp nurse hours dropped to 34,000, and will total only about 10,000 this year, Zedreck says.


Today, mandatory overtime isn’t even on Allegheny General nurses’ radar, says Zach Zobrist, vice president of SEIU Healthcare Pennsylvania, the nurses union at Allegheny and 19 other western Pennsylvania hospitals. That’s still not the case at other state hospitals, some of which have called Allegheny for advice on meeting the state regulations banning mandatory double shifts. “Even with the law, they haven’t worked it out yet,” Zobrist says.


Workforce Management, December 2010, p. 3-4 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on September 1, 2010June 29, 2023

Appealing to Workers’ Civic Side

The first time Comcast Corp. took part in a community service event, 50 employees at the cable television company’s corporate headquarters signed up to work at the local Philadelphia Cares Day.


Employees were so enthusiastic that the company started its own annual service day. That was nine years ago.


This April, more than 60,500 employees, family members and volunteers teamed with local and national nonprofit organizations for the company’s latest Comcast Cares Day. They planted gardens, cleaned up riverbanks and filled food baskets at 560 locations around the country.


Like Comcast, more companies have discovered that sponsoring community service days is not only a high-profile way to create good will in cities where they do business but also an effective means of attracting and retaining employees. Dozens of companies hold annual community service days, including Deloitte & Touche, IBM Corp. and Starbucks Corp.


During a five-week Community Days campaign in 2009, 1,639 employees at Hospital Corporation of America worked close to 10,000 hours on 108 projects in central Tennessee, an in-kind donation worth about $200,000, says spokesman Ed Fishbough. And GlaxoSmithKline recently pledged $500,000 to a national community service day planned for September 11, 2011, to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.


A recent Deloitte study shows how companies are monitoring employee morale, retention and recruiting to measure the success of their volunteer efforts. According to the 2010 Deloitte Volunteer Impact Survey, 51 percent of the 303 companies surveyed measure employee morale to determine whether community service programs are effective; 36 percent, employee retention; and 30 percent, recruiting success.


Civic engagement is becoming especially important as companies recruit members of the Millennial Generation, who are more likely than older employees to factor a company’s social responsibility and community outreach into their career decisions.


Recession-induced layoffs may have curtailed recruiting for the short term. But as economic pressures ease and companies start hiring again, more need to think about the community image they project if they want to attract not just Millennials but civic-minded employees of every age, says Erin Barnhart, volunteer initiatives director at Idealist.org, a nonprofit group that helps organizations find volunteer opportunities. Even in a tight job market, highly sought after workers may choose one company over another because of its corporate social responsibility programs, Barnhart says.


Comcast didn’t start its community service day to attract and retain employees, but that has been an unintended, positive consequence of the program, says Charisse Lillie, head of the company’s community involvement program and executive vice president of its nonprofit Comcast Foundation.


Comcast now incorporates information about all of its community service projects in the new employee onboarding process and on its website, says Lillie, who previously served as Comcast’s vice president of human resources.


Workforce Management, August 2010, p. 3 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on July 1, 2010June 29, 2023

Company Believes It Has Cracked the Code on Millennials Job-Seeking Habits

If Millennials are different from the rest of the working class, should companies use different tactics to recruit them?


The founders of Koda think the answer is yes.


Koda is a year-old service pairing recent college graduates with companies of all sizes looking for entry-level help.


Part job board and part social network, Koda is built on the premise that Millennials are Internet-savvy social animals who’d rather bookmark one online destination for scanning open positions and swapping job-hunting stories than troll individual company career centers or, God forbid, use Facebook for anything but hanging out.


The need’s there, says Jeff Berger, who dreamed up the company in 2007 with his roommate while still at Tulane University in New Orleans. LinkedIn caters to people who are already working.


Like other social networks, it’s more focused on the conversation than on the jobs, Berger says. Job boards such as Monster and CareerBuilder are so big they’re overwhelming, Berger says.


At Koda, “Our pool of jobs is very specific to the niche we’re focusing on,” he says. “We nail it down, have a platform so you can show yourself in the right professional format, and have a community to have that jobs discussion.”


Berger wouldn’t disclose how many Millennials have signed up for the service, which launched in May 2009. However, he says traffic to the San Francisco startup’s website has grown to 100,000 unique visitors a month. The company is doing more recruiting through university career centers, honor societies and alumni associations.


Partnerships include Starbucks, Hyatt Hotels
Koda has also partnered with 500 companies, including Starbucks, Hyatt Hotels Corp., Bechtel, Adidas and New York Life Insurance. Koda scrapes job-openings data from its partners’ online career sites to repost on its own, collecting an undisclosed finder’s fee whenever a member clicks through. The company recently hired a COO who previously worked at JobFox and CareerBuilder to provide the industry experience its young founders lack.


In addition to click-based revenue, Koda has raised $4.5 million in two rounds of angel financing to fund operations.


But industry experts say the enterprise has to yet to gain a substantial toehold. They question whether there’s room for niche communities such as Koda when many companies already rely on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter for recruiting.


On top of that, established job boards such as Monster and job search engines such as SimplyHired are adding features to be more attractive to 18- to 25-year-olds who want a little community thrown in with their job hunt.


As for the its financial backers, although Berger would not confirm it, sources close to the company say Koda’s angel is company president and co-founder Tony York’s family—business tycoons who own the San Francisco 49ers.


Showing a warm body behind job listings
When it comes to their careers, Gen Y’ers are different from older generations, recruiting industry experts say. For one thing, they care about a company’s corporate culture and want to see evidence of it in recruiting efforts, says Andrew Chen, a senior product manager at SimplyHired.


“You have to reach out to them in ways that are meaningful to them, such as having a presence on Facebook and Twitter, and a blog that shows your company’s personality so they get the sense that there’s a warm body behind the listings,” Chen says.


Millennials also care about more than salary and benefits; they want to know about a company’s extracurricular activities and what community service programs they offer, Chen says. “The highest salary doesn’t always win,” he says.


To make its service attractive to Millennials, SimplyHired struck a deal to include Koda jobs in its search results. In April, SimplyHired also added a new-graduate filter to its jobs search engine so novice job seekers could weed out everything but entry-level positions. The initial reaction to the service has been strong, Chen says. “Usage numbers are pretty good,” he says.


Penelope Trunk, whose Brazen Careerist website and blog blazed the trail for Gen Y communities online, doesn’t see Koda as competition either. Koda’s focus is job listings, while Careerist’s is conversation, she says. Even so, Koda’s model has limitations, she says. Companies want to recruit top performers, but if someone is that good, the jobs will come to them and they don’t need a job board to find work, she says.


Dan Finnigan, a job board industry veteran who once ran Yahoo HotJobs, almost started a Gen Y job search service before becoming CEO of recruiting software maker Jobvite in 2008. The opportunity is there because the Facebook generation doesn’t necessarily feel comfortable in the same online space as the LinkedIn generation, he says.


In the end, Finnigan sees Facebook adding features to accommodate Millennials’ job searches.


“The job searches that matter, the ones based on who you know, that’s going to take place on the network where they have relationships—and that’s Facebook,” he says. “I guarantee you, the work and experience section of Facebook will become very important over time. Everyone will have access to your professional profile on Facebook. Facebook will evolve to be where that generation navigates their relationships and work.”


Workforce Management Online, July 2010 — Register Now!

Posted on June 18, 2010August 9, 2018

Shareholders Demand Better Window Into Succession

B uried inside Bank of America’s 2010 proxy statement is a shareholder resolution that requires the company’s board to give stockholders details of how they’d pick a new CEO if the current one gets sick, quits or—as CEO Ken Lewis did in 2009 with calamitous results—unexpectedly announces his retirement with no clear successor in place.


Whole Foods Market’s 2010 proxy included an almost identical resolution, put forward by the Laborers National Pension Fund, a Texas-based labor union retirement fund that owns shares in both companies.


The resolutions are among the first to surface following revisions in Securities and Exchange Commission guidance governing CEO succession planning.


In the end, neither BofA nor Whole Foods shareholders adopted the resolutions, which both companies’ boards opposed.


But while some Fortune 1,000 companies have fought the changes as unnecessary and potentially harmful, others are working with shareholder groups to make policies more transparent in an effort to stave off a proxy-vote battle.


“Succession planning is quickly moving from a staff administrative exercise to a risk management process driven by investors,” says Jeff McCutcheon, an executive pay expert with consultant Board Advisory LLC.


Historically, the SEC treated CEO succession planning as “ordinary business matters—information that companies weren’t required to share with shareholders.


But in an October 2009 legal bulletin, the agency reversed its position, saying that “recent events” underscored the importance of a board’s role in choosing a company’s top executive.


Preparing for an orderly transition from one CEO to another is an area that corporate boards agree they need to work on. In a 2009 survey, the National Association of Corporate Directors found that 89.2 percent of corporate directors ranked CEO succession as critical, while only 15.7 percent saw themselves as highly effective in that area.


One of the first resolutions put to a vote was at Whole Foods’ March 8 annual meeting. The proposal didn’t pass, but 30 percent of the food chain’s shareholders approved it. That’s not bad for a first-time resolution, according to O’Dell, who says succession planning will be the main focus of the fund’s shareholder resolutions in 2011.


BofA and Whole Foods officials did not return calls requesting comment. However, in its 2010 proxy, BofA’s board urged against approving the proposal, saying its existing corporate governance guidelines address succession planning and that information on the process “is expected to be included annually in our proxy materials.”


Given the circumstances of Lewis’ retirement and the lawsuits filed because of it, industry watchers expected—and got—fireworks at BofA’s annual meeting. In the end, 40 percent of the bank’s shareholders voted in favor of the resolution—not enough for it to pass, but enough to send a powerful message, according to McCutcheon.


The fact that so many shareholders voted for it against management recommendation indicates “substantial support for increased transparency around Bank of America’s executive succession management,” he says.


Workforce Management, June 2010, p. 14 — Subscribe Now!

Posted on May 13, 2010June 29, 2023

The Hive Mind at Work

When Michael O’Malley discusses the hive mind, he’s not speaking figuratively. A social psychologist, Yale University Press editor and longtime beekeeper, O’Malley applied his apiarian knowledge to management practices in The Wisdom of Bees: What the Hive Can Teach Business About Leadership, Efficiency, and Growth. O’Malley spoke recently with Workforce Management contributing editor Michelle V. Rafter about the book.


Workforce Management: A lot of the book pertains to bees’ labor practices. What can HR managers learn from studying how they work?


Michael O’Malley: Beehives foster lifelong development in their workforce, so average tenure and productivity are as high as possible.


WM: Hives have very high bee retention rates, what can companies learn from that to better train and hang on to employees?


O’Malley: Bees have a disciplined career development program. They start with simple tasks inside the hive and work their way to the periphery doing most complex tasks until they become foragers. By contrast, I did a study for a retailer who was replacing every sales associate three times over the course of a year. When that happens, the whole operation shifts to an internal focus, replacing lost workers, instead of external operations, like selling things—or in the hive, gathering nectar.


WM: You call annual performance reviews “loathsome.” What should companies do instead?


O’Malley: Bees are always assessing each other’s productivity. If a bee’s infected and will be detrimental to the hive, they remove it immediately. Organizations can naturally embed reviews into their operations. I recommend using recognition programs to foster ongoing awareness of who’s going a good job. It’s more spontaneous and then it becomes a part of what you do as a manager or supervisor.


WM: Bees don’t have to recruit; they just hatch new workers. What can the hive teach companies about hiring?


O’Malley: Sometimes a colony merges with another hive. If other bees are introduced, they mix the combs from the two hives. There is an enculturation process. In an organization, that enculturation process could be as simple as when a new person’s arriving, some kind of developmental program that makes them feel wanted. That’s probably the most important element, if they’re hired: making them feel like they belong and are wanted.


WM: Sick bees remove themselves from the hive. But bad employees don’t just voluntarily leave. How should companies handle them?


O’Malley: The first line for the colony is to save the bee. The hive doesn’t want to lose workers. Bees give each other a chance. They have a shaking signal that says, “Help me,” and they’ll pull off mites or anything that might be injurious to the bee. In companies, it’s finding the right fit. It’s not that the person is a poor performer; they’re a poor performer in this context, but they have a redeeming value that in the right context can be developed. Barring that, when I ask executives about their mistakes, they routinely say they didn’t remove someone with performance problems quickly enough. Like in the hive, the first instinct is to save and the second is to act.


WM: What can the hive teach companies with multigenerational workforces?


O’Malley: In the hive, older bees serve as mentors to the younger bees. That’s particularly true when they become foragers. Novice bees go into the field with veterans who show them how to navigate better, work a flower better, identify flowers better. When scientists measure nectar intake, they find that as the novice learns from the veteran, they get more efficient in bringing in more nectar per trip.


WM: Happy bees are productive bees. What can companies do so employees stay happy and productive?


O’Malley: Bees are susceptible to stress, and they get stressed when they’re working odd hours, not eating right and working hard. That should sound familiar. One way companies can improve productivity is to manage stress in their organizations. Give people sabbaticals or special projects. Another way is, sound communications about what’s going on so people aren’t thinking the worst. And companies do a pretty good job of wellness programs.


WM: You commend companies like Cisco for following hive-mind philosophies. How can other companies adopt these principles?


O’Malley: Bees protect the future. If conditions are poor, they ratchet up R&D investment through increased exploratory behavior. That’s the opposite of what a lot companies do. During the recession, Cisco maintained internal business development and R&D expenditures, so I gave them credit for protecting their future by continuing to make essential investments. They take hits for that. Analysts complain their earnings aren’t what they could be, but that’s the challenge of a chief executive, to make the company a lasting enterprise.


Workforce Management Online, May 2010 — Register Now!

Posted on December 11, 2009August 31, 2018

Microsoft Does a Benefits Tech Makeover

In the past year, Microsoft had its first layoff ever, eliminating 5,800 jobs as the software giant dealt with the recession and Internet-induced technological changes that have loosened its vise-like grip on the software business.


To cut costs, the $58.4 billion company also reduced travel and eliminated contract positions.


But in its efforts to rein in spending, there’s one thing Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft hasn’t touched: employees’ health care benefits.


This year, as in years past, Microsoft paid for 100 percent of the cost of health care for approximately 55,000 U.S. employees. The company’s largess doesn’t end there. Microsoft also picks up the tab for premiums and other health care expenses for every U.S. employee’s eligible dependents, bringing the number of total lives covered close to 140,000, roughly the population of Pasadena, California, or Syracuse, New York.


But to continue that kind of benefit commitment, something had to give, as Microsoft confronted rising benefits costs, a maturing, family-starting workforce and the management of a multiplicity of health and wellness portals. Not surprisingly, Microsoft’s solution was a technological one—an online employee benefits portal. But this was a solution with a twist: Microsoft opted to buy the technology, not build it from the ground up.


First among Microsoft’s challenges was the very cost of benefits. Employers’ health care costs are rising around 10 percent a year, and some like-sized Fortune 1,000 companies have dropped all but the least expensive coverage. Microsoft’s HR executives knew that if they wanted to continue offering 100-percent-paid benefits, they had to do a better job of making workers think twice before using them unnecessarily, like rushing to the ER for every sprain, strain and kid with an ear infection.


The need for cost containment also has become more pressing as Microsoft workers have gotten older. The company’s historically young workforce is growing up, with an average age of 38. As they age, company employees are getting married, having families and using more health care, contributing to higher costs. On average, eight Microsoft babies are born every day, which helps to explain why maternity and newborn costs are typically Microsoft’s Nos. 1 and 2 health care costs, according to Julie Sheehy, U.S. health benefits director at the company.


Finally, Microsoft wanted to do a better job of weaving together employee health and wellness services and resources provided through a growing list of outside partners such as the Mayo Clinic and Medco that hadn’t been well integrated into the company’s health insurance enrollment portal.


In July 2007, with all that in mind, a team of Microsoft HR managers led by Lee Johnson, director of HR solutions delivery, was given the job of looking for ways to streamline the company’s health care benefits platform while simultaneously making employees more cost-conscious health care shoppers. Johnson and his team came up with a single portal to replace a mishmash of stand-alone systems, a site dubbed MyMicrosoftBenefits.com.


Today, employees use MyMicrosoftBenefits.com during open enrollment season to shop the health insurance plans Microsoft offers for the one with the best fit. They can also log on to check balances in their health care benefits flex account, look up old claims, compare and purchase prescription medications, check ratings for area hospitals, track a personal exercise program and read up on specific diseases and conditions.


In addition, the portal is integrated with Microsoft’s Health Vault personal medical records software program, an application employees can use to store immunization histories, doctor’s office visit notes and other health records for themselves and their families.


Microsoft could have built a health care portal itself—the company’s HR IT team had previously built systems for compensation administration and career development. But HR execs opted to devote department manpower to other projects and brought in an outside vendor to do the heavy lifting. They tapped Enwisen, a privately held Novato, California, company that provides software-as-a-service HR portals, onboarding products and other HR delivery technologies to customers such as Nissan, Hershey, American Modern Insurance Group and Yahoo.


As any software company knows, getting from concept to concrete application isn’t easy, and getting MyMicrosoftBenefits.com up and running was no exception. About a year into the project, Johnson’s team realized that some information they wanted to shift to the portal, including “tens of thousands of pages” of health care resource material that was up to 15 years old, was too buggy to be moved, according to Johnson. Even though they intended to launch in time for the open enrollment season in November 2008, they stopped work for three months to clean up the data.


At the same time Microsoft was building the portal, the company was also turning over benefits administration to Watson Wyatt Worldwide, and adding outside vendors for tuition reimbursement and other specialty services, and those wrinkles added to the project’s complexity. “We could have done a better job of it, but luckily we could lean on Enwisen for a lot of the integration,” Johnson said during a presentation on the project at the recent HR Technology Conference in Chicago.


MyMicrosoftBenefits brings enrollment, health and wellness information and information on non-health care perks such as tuition reimbursement under one electronic roof. It also has several other features employees specifically requested.


They had grumbled about having to use a separate password to log on to the old enrollment system, so the new portal works with the same password employees use to access the company intranet. Since spouses are often the health care decision makers in the family, they were given access to a certain areas of the portal that they can log on to over the Internet.


Rolled out in September 2008, the portal got its first real test during open enrollment season two months later. Although Microsoft hadn’t made significant changes to health benefits, traffic to the portal skyrocketed compared with traffic to the older system, reaching a peak of nearly166,000 unique visits during November 2008. Since then, the site has averaged about 1.5 sessions per employee per month, according to Johnson.


Traffic Bumps
Traffic to Microsoft’s MyMicrosoftBenefits.com is seasonal, climbing highest during open enrollment each year in November. Since the portal debuted in September 2008, employees have averaged 1.5 visits a month.
September 20083,998
October 2008  50,485
November 2008165,941
December 2008  72,361
January 2009  96,461
February 2009  68,303
March 2009  82,721
April 2009  75,924
May 2009  65,802
June 2009  64,799
July 2009  59,652
August 2009  63,293
September 2009  72,889
October 2009  87,416
November 2009162,327

Source: Microsoft


Sheehy, the company’s U.S. health care benefits director, won’t disclose how much Microsoft spent on the portal, or how much Microsoft has saved on benefits delivery as a result.


But according to Barbara Levin, Enwisen senior vice president of marketing and customer community, other Enwisen customers have cut claims costs significantly after creating a self-serve benefits portal. Employees make better—and cheaper—health care choices when they are armed with more information, and are also more likely to take advantage of wellness and other programs.


For example, after Enwisen built a benefits portal for American Modern Insurance Group, the 900-employee specialty insurer in Amelia, Ohio, cut its claims costs 10 percent, according to Levin. “The theory is [that] in high-deductible plans, where employees pay a higher deductible, they’ll be smarter about their health, and then [the number of] doctor visits, procedures and so on are lower, and they’ve proven this,” Levin says.


At the HR Technology Conference, Johnson said Microsoft spends “hundreds of millions” on benefits claims a year, so the portal is a big step toward getting employees to realize the financial ramifications of their individual health care choices.


Microsoft’s benefits managers hope to use the portal in 2010 to share even more benefits information with employees, as a way of driving home their message of cost consciousness. “We’re talking about doing a total rewards statement on compensation, benefits and perks associated with employment,” Johnson said.

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