HRreview Header

How to effectively implement a wellness programme at work

-

shutterstock_133203932

Wellness programmes are now more relevant than ever in the organisational world. Those professionals involved in looking after employees such as Human Resources, Occupational Health and Welfare officers are very concerned about the health risk factors emerging at work and at same time they are looking at ways to take action efficiently.

We now have concrete research that tells us why Wellness programmes are a good option to improve organisational performance, starting with a ROI ( return on investment) by cutting costs in absenteeism and ill-health. However the benefits are much wider than just looking at the financial side. If you take into consideration engaging potentially disengaged staff and raise motivation levels this is a clear win win proposition to any organisation.

Take the following steps to implement your wellness programme effectively:

  • Come up with a great branding name for the programme and get buy-in from the management in your organisation. A clear association with wellness such as BWell or BActive, BHealthy leaves no-one with doubts about the message behind it. Then engage your senior management from the start, they will encourage participation as leaders. Therefore there is a reflection on the direction of where you are going with the programme.
  • Make sure that you know your organisational issues and have a clear vision how to help your employees. The wellness programme is not about ticking a box, is about helping creating a better working environment where everyone benefits from. Get a clear picture about your employee’s data including absence figures, reasons, most common causes, most prevalent months, and any demographics that you can access. There are a number of tools out there that can you help you understand your workforce before making costly mistakes by implement something that is not relevant to them.
  • Communicate your plans first, in order to maximise the engagement levels you must raise the awareness about it. Get people excited about the wellness programme, perhaps create incentives for participation or link it to your benefits strategy encouraging your employees to talk about it. There are many ways to engage, however bear in mind that everyone is different and you are working against people’s perceptions and personal beliefs.
  • Implement your wellness on a future date ( i.e. in 3 months time), this will enable you to get more time to plan, implement other activities to support the programme launch and make sure that everyone in the organisation knows about what is going to happen. A great way to raise awareness about health and wellbeing is focusing on one or two subjects to generate interest. Create a wellness days, ask your employees to help you get posters up and encourage them to take ownership about the initiative.
  • Launch your wellness programme on a planned and agreed date. Make sure you create a buzz about it, get people on board and ask them what they like or dislike about it. Give the impression that the programme is really important…in fact it is, so the employees of your organisation. Explain to your employees, why the wellness programmes exists….what you are trying to achieve.
  • Finally have clear desired outcomes, i.e. reduce absenteeism in the winter months by 10 % or improve physical activity participation levels by 30%. Also monitor and evaluate as you go along, if the programme is two or three months in length it makes sense to not only review in the end but constantly reassess (another great opportunity to engage and involve employees).

Complete the process by planning ahead, review engagement figures, measurable outcomes, indices of satisfaction and sustainability in order to prepare your next wellness programme. If you want results you must let the time take its course, learn lessons from this wellness programme experience, make it better next time.

Don’t forget that employees are at the heart of the programme, therefore they should also be at the heart of the evaluation, monitoring and planning for the next one.

Good luck with your wellness programme

Joao Bocas – Chief Resilience Officer & CEO at Sports13

www.sports13.co.uk

Latest news

Turning Workforce Data into Real Insight: A practical session for HR leaders

HR teams are being asked to deliver greater impact with fewer resources. This practical session is designed to help you move beyond instinct and start using workforce data to make faster, smarter decisions that drive real business results.

Bethany Cann of Specsavers

A working day balancing early talent strategy, university partnerships and family life at the international opticians retailer.

Workplace silence leaving staff afraid to raise mistakes

Almost half of UK workers feel unable to raise concerns or mistakes at work, with new research warning that workplace silence is damaging productivity.

Managers’ biggest fears? ‘Confrontation and redundancies’

Survey of UK managers reveals fear of confrontation and redundancies, with many lacking training to handle difficult workplace situations.
- Advertisement -

Mike Bond: Redefining talent – and prioritising the creative mindset

Not too long ago, the most prized CVs boasted MBAs, consulting pedigrees and an impressive record of traditional experience. Now, things are different.

UK loses ground in global remote work rankings

Connectivity gaps across the UK risk weakening the country’s appeal to remote workers and internationally mobile talent.

Must read

Andrew Sobel: HR’s role in building clients for life

Effective client relationships fundamentally determine the success or failure of any professional services firm or business-to-business company.  All this creates a new challenge for HR: how can you help the client relationship managers in your organisation to succeed?

Lewis Maleh: What do the Big Tech layoffs signal for recruitment and the future of work in 2023?

Over the past month, we have seen more and more tech companies announce considerable layoffs against a backdrop of economic uncertainty, highlights Lewis Maleh. What does the future look like?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you