Welling Being Rising

Welling Being Rising

New data shows employee wellbeing rising up UK corporate agenda in comparison to other countries

  • Impact and evaluation of wellbeing also increases in large UK organisations
  • Stress and time management programmes increase in the UK
  • Overtime discouraged in more European and global organisations

Global data from the Top Employers Institute shows that employee wellbeing in the UK has risen up the corporate agenda with 82% of many large companies consistently defining an organisation-wide total wellbeing programme in 2017, increasing from 73% in 2016. What’s more, the impact and effectiveness of programmes are evaluated consistently with 71% doing so, up from 65% last year, while employee wellbeing education has also jumped from 61% to 85% in the last year.

This compares to global Top Employers increasing employee wellbeing programmes from 67% to 68%, evaluation increasing from 55% to 57% and employee education increasing from 20% to 21% in the last year.

The data comes from research into 71 companies certified as Top Employers UK for 2016, and 78 companies certified in 2017, plus a further 1,100 globally.

Interestingly, in the UK, increasing numbers of stress management programmes have been implemented by companies – up from 83% to 88%, while more time management courses have been added, up from 80% to 86%. Global companies, on the other hand, report an increase in stress management programmes from 74% to 78%, while time management programmes have increased from 76% to 77%.

Discouraging overtime, however, is more prevalent in European and global firms. Although the UK has increased efforts in this, with 37% of Top Employers now doing so (up from 32% last year), 52% of European and global participants do so (both up from 44% last year). Indeed, more European (65%) and global (57%) firms provide an in-house doctor, in comparison to 37% of UK large firms.

Flexible office workspace is also higher in the UK – 92% of participants provide this (up from 86%), while 73% of European companies do so (up from 67%) and global at 68% (up from 64%).

Alessio Tanganelli, Regional Director UK of the Top Employers Institute, said: “In the last year alone, nearly 10% more certified Top Employers have implemented an organisation-wide total wellbeing programme – an enormous leap in a 12 month period. It is clear that it is becoming even more of a priority for companies.

“Organisations tell us that they focus on fulfilling employees’ potential through health, that they believe happy, healthy employees enable a business to thrive and that they want to foster healthy habits. In a constantly changing world of work, where demands shift on both employers and employees, our view is that health and wellbeing needs to be agile and adaptable.

“Conversely, some employers seem to have multiple wellbeing practices but have not yet applied them to an overall programme or strategy, meaning they are somewhat aimless. We see this changing as organisations understand what their peers are achieving and then work to implement their own strategy.”

A correlation exists between wellbeing initiatives and absenteeism. On average, Top Employers have absenteeism rates 25% lower than other companies of comparable size. When applying industry estimates of average absence costs, this translates into an annual financial health saving of up to £750k for companies with a Top Employer average size workforce of c4500 employees.

Wellbeing programmes can include employee assistance programmes, occupational health and debt support through to onsite sports facilities, onsite flu vaccinations, smoking cessation programmes, ergonomic support or nutritional information programmes.

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