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How to get the message across means knowing your staff

Offer­ing an attrac­tive ben­e­fits pack­age to your employ­ees is one thing, ensur­ing that they ful­ly under­stand its con­tent and val­ue is anoth­er. An effec­tive com­mu­ni­ca­tion strat­e­gy is the key to encour­ag­ing staff to take up the ben­e­fits being pre­sent­ed to them, but employ­ers don’t always get it right.

“The pro­vi­sion of ben­e­fits cur­rent­ly tops the list of what employ­ees expect from an employ­er, illus­trat­ing a clear link to staff engage­ment and moti­va­tion, yet many schemes fail to deliv­er sim­ply because they have not been com­mu­ni­cat­ed prop­er­ly,” says David Walk­er, com­mu­ni­ca­tions direc­tor at Per­son­al Group.

There are numer­ous ways of get­ting the mes­sage across to the work­force, from tra­di­tion­al brochures and book­lets that are hand­ed out to every mem­ber of staff, to tech­nol­o­gy-based chan­nels, includ­ing webi­na­rs, email and, more recent­ly, mobile devices and social-media cam­paigns.

While younger employ­ees may embrace cut­ting-edge dig­i­tal com­mu­ni­ca­tions, not every­one has access to a com­put­er

Which will have the most impact? Face-to-face com­mu­ni­ca­tion pro­vides a bet­ter oppor­tu­ni­ty to explain the more com­plex, but tax-effi­cient, salary sac­ri­fice ben­e­fits; how­ev­er, it is more dif­fi­cult to organ­ise for mobile, remote and home-based staff. And while younger employ­ees may embrace cut­ting-edge dig­i­tal com­mu­ni­ca­tions, not every­one has access to a com­put­er. There is no one-size-fits-all solu­tion, and often it comes down to under­stand­ing the com­pa­ny cul­ture and ask­ing staff how they would like to receive infor­ma­tion.

When invoice finance solu­tions firm Bib­by Finan­cial Ser­vices intro­duced flex­i­ble ben­e­fits into its reward pro­gramme ear­li­er this year, a series of road­shows, held at each of its 17 UK offices, was by far the most pop­u­lar method of com­mu­ni­ca­tion with the firm’s 720 employ­ees. “We knew from staff feed­back gath­ered before and after the scheme launch that this was what most peo­ple want­ed,” says HR project man­ag­er Vicky Smith.

“Each event was pre­sent­ed by the man­ag­ing direc­tor of that office, with rep­re­sen­ta­tives from the HR team pro­vid­ing sup­port and exper­tise. We also ran online webi­na­rs for field sales­peo­ple who couldn’t get to the road­shows, and used emails and the intranet to rein­force the mes­sage. How­ev­er, the glossy brochure that we had print­ed was the least pop­u­lar method of pro­vid­ing infor­ma­tion and, as it was also the most expen­sive, we won’t be reprint­ing it,” she adds.

In larg­er organ­i­sa­tions, where the work­force demo­graph­ic is much broad­er in terms of age, back­ground, employ­ment lev­el and role, a seg­ment­ed com­mu­ni­ca­tions strat­e­gy is called for.

Matthew Greg­son, a senior con­sul­tant at Thom­sons Online Ben­e­fits, explains: “Pen­sions infor­ma­tion, for exam­ple, will have dif­fer­ent degrees of rel­e­vance to peo­ple of dif­fer­ent ages, so the con­tent and the mode of com­mu­ni­ca­tion must be tai­lored to these age groups. If you don’t know who your employ­ees are or what they want, your com­mu­ni­ca­tions strat­e­gy will be inef­fec­tive.”

One of the advan­tages of using a third-par­ty ben­e­fits scheme provider is that they can pro­vide the detailed analy­sis of work­force demo­graph­ics need­ed for effec­tive seg­men­ta­tion and accu­rate tar­get­ing of ben­e­fits infor­ma­tion to the peo­ple most like­ly to take them up.

How­ev­er, in a pre­vail­ing cli­mate of low or no pay ris­es, ben­e­fits that deliv­er finan­cial sav­ings, includ­ing tax-effi­cient salary sac­ri­fice ben­e­fits and dis­count­ed retail schemes, will be wel­comed by the major­i­ty of work­ers.

James Malia, head of employ­ee ben­e­fits at P&MM, says: “The impor­tant thing is to com­mu­ni­cate the actu­al sav­ings they can make, for exam­ple on the annu­al costs of their child­care or mobile phone, or their week­ly gro­cery shop­ping, so they see the val­ue in terms of actu­al cash in their pock­et. Get the com­mu­ni­ca­tion right and the ben­e­fits scheme becomes a key part of the employ­ee engage­ment strat­e­gy.”