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Thursday, October 27, 2011

Benefits and the Coming Employee Retention Crisis

As the Great Recession has worn on, more and more American companies have been forced to downsize their workforces and replace human capital with technology. The result has been a rapid increase in productivity and record corporate profits.

Unfortunately, those pay-offs have come at a price. Many of the remaining employees are being asked to do more for the same compensation. Although unhappy about this arrangement, after seeing their coworkers laid off, these employees accept the unspoken truth: "Be happy that you still have a job at all." As glad as most are to still be working, their level of satisfaction and their loyalty to the firm have eroded. With fears about job security, and few prospects for changing jobs in today's economic climate, these employees "soldier on," biding their time.

For many companies, this may lead to a rude awakening when the economy eventually revives. The 9th Annual MetLife's ! Study of Employee Benefits Trends offers a warning and clear message to employers: "Reprioritize employee loyalty and satisfaction, or economic recovery may arrive with unanticipated setbacks for retention and productivity."

In other words, happy employees now may mean less turnover later.
The MetLife study revealed a startling statistic: "One in three employees hopes to be working elsewhere in the next 12 months." This is a high level of dissatisfaction and implicit disloyalty. But the study also revealed a disconnect. Employers perceive employees to be more loyal than they are. For this reason, most employers are largely oblivious to the looming retention challenge, and uncommitted to addressing it.

Here are the key numbers from the MetLife study:

• Just 44 percent of small business employees felt loyal to their company in 2010.
• By comparison, 62 percent of the same category of employees felt l! oyal in 2008.
• Meanwhile, 54 percent of employers beli eve their employees feel a strong sense of loyalty to their firm.
• Only 22 percent of employers listed retaining employees as their number one concern, with 33 percent saying...
For more in-depth analysis of what this means to you, click here.

Friday, October 21, 2011

Employers Should Start Preparing to Report Cost of Employer-Sponsored Group Health Coverage

"To comply with this new requirement, employers should start gearing up to make sure systems are in place to track employee coverage and coordinate with their finance, payroll and human resources staff and vendors to ensure accurate reporting." (Snell & Wilmer

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

401(k) Participants Are Ready to Plan


Despite deep economic concerns, retirement plan participants are renewing their focus on retirement savings. Over the past year 41% of participants increased their 401(k) contribution rate (up from 31%); 40% reallocated their portfolios (up from 33%) and 38% reallocated future contributions (up from 29%). In the coming year, participants expect to contribute more to their 401(k) plans. Also, a slightly higher percentage expect to contribute the tax-deferred maximum (11%, up from 8% in 2010).

A resounding 85% of participants are confident in their 401(k) asset allocation; 83% are confident in their investment selection; and 77% are confident in their contribution amount. Thirty-six percent said that a major savings objective is to save for healthcare expenses in retirement, up from 24% in 2010. For more information, visit www.mercer.com.

Gallup-Healthways study shows excessive weight leads to missed work - Articles - Employee Benefit News

WASHINGTON | Mon Oct 17, 2011 11:05am EDT (Reuters) - Full-time U.S. workers who have chronic health troubles or are overweight cost more than $153 billion in lost productivity each year from absenteeism, according to a Gallup-Healthways study released on Monday.



Gallup-Healthways study shows excessive weight leads to missed work - Articles - Employee Benefit News

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

National Dental Health Month October 2011

October is National Dental Health Month!

Time to get your Dental Health Checkup

Exam
Exrays
Ceaning

ALl plans include these feaures and you can have dental health insurance for very affordable rates.

Monday, October 17, 2011

Get Help in understanding your Medicare Options



Find Benefits Programs...
Get all the benefits you deserve. Find and enroll in federal, state, local and private programs that help pay for prescription drugs, utility bills, meals, health care and other needs.

Get Started
Apply for Medicare Rx Extra Help...
If you are one of millions of people with Medicare who have limited income and resources, apply now for Extra Help through Medicare’s Prescription Drug Coverage. At the same time, you can also start an application for the Medicare Savings Programs and find out if you qualify for other valuable benefits programs.

Get Started
Need Help Paying for Food?
The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) (the new name for the federal Food Stamp Program) helps low-income individuals and families buy the food they need for good health. Visit the SNAP Application Forms Service to find your local program, get an application to apply, and search for stores to use the card (includes every state, District of Columbia, U.S. Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico and Guam).

Get Started
Get Eldercare Assistance
Caring for aging parents, elders, and loved ones is challenging. Caring.com provides the expert advice, practical information, easy-to-use tools, and person-to-person support you need to make the journey easier.

Tuesday, October 04, 2011

Your free and easy 8-week workforce health program

One extra pound a holiday season: That's what most people gain every year. It may not seem like much, but it adds up. And people who are already overweight tend to gain even more.* Over time, this extra weight can reduce your employees' effectiveness and even lead to major medical risks.

With our free eight-week program, you can cook up some healthy camaraderie from Halloween through New Year's Day. It's an easy way to get your business on the path to workforce health. And it can lead to big changes:

•Higher employee spirit and morale
•Less stress and more productivity
•Lower overall health care costs for you and your employees
Tools to hold off the holiday pounds
In the toolkit, you'll find everything you need to carry out a simple and successful campaign.

•Maintain Don't Gain checklist—a planning tool for you and your wellness team, the checklist includes a calendar and an explanation of the promotional and campaign materials
•Campaign emails (eight in total)—the center of your campaign, each prewritten email shares a challenge, tip, and resource to help your employees stay healthy and maintain their weight
•Promotional materials—get your employees excited about your program with emails and materials you can post around the office
•Employee pledge sheet—allows employees to publicize that they're participating in your program
•Employee tracking tool—gives each employee a place to record their personal progress every week

Download the toolkit (zip file)