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Shel Holtz
Communicating at the Intersection of Business and Technology
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Where wellness fits in employee communications

Last week during his keynote at Ragan‘s Corporate Communicators Conference, Steve Crescenzo blasted a host of topics covered by internal communicators. Articles about employee wellness were at the top of Steve’s list. Talking to employees about their health is a waste of time and resources; employees aren’t likely to take advice on their health from the company, anyway.

Hot on the heels of the conference, though, I caught the results of a survey from United Benefit Advisors, which talked to 1,746 employers representing a cross-section of industry groups, employee populations, and U.S. geographic regions. The results: Pretty much every employer in the country is looking to expand wellness initiatives. Companies want to lower the cost of the medical plans; healthier employees file fewer claims. They also want a more stable, productive workforce; sick employees who take a lot of time off aren’t as productive as healthy employees. Sorry to belabor the obvious.

Lower health care costs and higher productivity are not unreasonable goals, and a healthier workforce is not an unreasonable strategy for achieving those goals. According to the survey, nearly three-quarters of employes believe workers can become better healthcare consumers if the company gives them the right tools. According to UBA co-founder David LoCascio,

Employer involvement is helping to manage the health of its workforce has been rapidly graining momentum. The old approach of simply hoping for good claims experience has not worked, and employers are increasingly assuming more responsibility and control in an effort to impact both plan costs and employee productivity.

Aside from his use of the word “impact” as a verb, LoCascio is right. And wellness initiatives designed to drive business results need to be communicated. The question is, how do internal communicators convey these messages without sounding irrelevant? Steve is right, too, that most employees will roll their eyes and dismiss a story on how taking the stairs instead of the elevator will help you meet your daily exercise goals. (In fact, Steve doesn’t really have a problem with wellness communication. In an email, he clarified that he has a problem with bad wellness communication: “I just hate it when people take the easy way out and run stupid “tips” that nobody will ever follow!”

Here are some suggestions for communicating wellness in a way that’s meaningful:

  • Monitor the company’s status—It’s often said that you can’t fix what you can’t measure. Report regularly on the company’s medical claims levels and the associated cost. If you can tie a reduction in claims to employee participation in wellness programs, so much the better!
  • Make the wellness-work connection, and make it personal—Interview employees about how involvement in company-sponsored wellness programs is affecting their work and their attitudes about the company.
  • Tie wellness initiatives into recruiting efforts—Offering wellness programs is a benefit; employees don’t need to seek similar programs at higher costs outside of work.
  • Produce an independent wellness communication vehicle—Separate wellness from other communications. This keeps your business communications focused on business and appearing less fluffy. It also shines the light on wellness and confirms that it’s a serious issue for the organization.
  • Use alternative channels for wellness communication—How about a wellness podcast? Or a wellness blog? Again, this keeps general internal communication and wellness communication separate, for the most part.
  • Tie wellness to news—If company productivity is an issue, make sure the fact that the company’s health insurance claims experience is factored into the coverage. Healthier employees could make a difference. And if you can link that to incentive pay, then you could even motivate employees to get healthier because it’s in their financial self interest.

Other thoughts?

Comments
  • 1.Hi Shel:

    Working in the field of HR communication consulting, I pretty much agree with Steve that 'eat an apple, take the stairs' messages aren't a good use of internal communicators' time or energy. There's enough research to show that employees' #2 preferred source of health and wellness education comes from external, online sources. Health professionals rank #1, no surprise; media rank #3 and the employer generally clocks in about #4.

    What internal communicators can do, in addition to the good ideas you suggested, is beetle down the hall to HR and make some new best friends. Here are four more ideas to add to your suggestions.

    One, absence from work -- whether it's due to illness, injury, 'mental health days', stress, or whatever cause -- is a big issue. There is a real business education story about the soft costs of lost productivity and the hard costs of paying disability claims. It fits right in with the need to educate employees about the real cost of health care benefits, pension plans, and retiree health benefits. These are all as much a part of the company financial picture as the number of lampshades you sell.

    Two: HR colleagues will shine when they can successfully drive change through the programs and services they manage. If your company is launching a new program that aims to get disabled employees back to work, or to provide stress counselling, or to help employees develop their own health and wellness action plan, the communicator can partner with the HR program manager and put their skills to work to increase engagement, participation, and action.

    Three: communicators can help HR improve the usability and online experience of their HR portals, enrollment tools, health care estimators, health assessment interfaces, and other gadgets. Many of these are provided by vendors and many are task-based and transactional tools. Communication expertise can help the HR portal to work effectively for the end user.

    Four: communicators can work alongside HR to identify external health and wellness information from credible sources. These are the same credible sources that many people are already using on their own. So build them into your company's HR portal and let the Mayo Clinic tell your employees to eat apples and climb stairs. The message is now being delivered by the right experts, and your job has been to deliver the message as part of an integrated site.

    Annie Massey | May 2007 | Toronto

  • 2.For me, wellness is the priority in workplace. Employees must be covered financially and employers must ensure that workplace is a safe place for workers.
    Healthy and happy employees will turn into a profitable company.

    Healthy guy | May 2008

  • 3.Great to read about wellness fits and some good references. Thanks a lot man.

    mithii | June 2008 | USA

  • 4.Unfortunately very few employers are willing to spend money on rehab and <a >disability equipment</a> unless the employee has some very special competence.

    Leah | July 2008

  • 5."Where wellness fits in employee communications" title says everything with this article. Nice Article http://healthbeautyproduct.blogspot.com/

    Austin Elvin | August 2008 | Delhi

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