Financial Wellbeing & Its Role in a Complete Employee Wellbeing Program

Financial Wellbeing & Its Role in a Complete Employee Wellbeing Program

Financial wellbeing and its role in a complete employee wellbeing program. In this guest post, DHS Group‘s VP of Employer Solutions, Rich Siegenthaler, recommends four ways your employee wellness program can keep up with changes in the benefits industry. The opinions expressed in this blog belong to the author and DHS Group.

It’s getting more and more common to see employers focusing on strategies to assist their employee population in managing their complete wellbeing rather than one single area. They’re accomplishing this by adding programs that benefit the financial wellbeing and mental health of employees. This is a step in the right direction that’s quickly leading to healthier employees in every sense of the word.

Maybe you’re already putting some of these strategies to work or maybe you’re hoping to in the near future. Wherever you are in the journey, DHS Group’s VP of Employer Solutions and experienced employee wellbeing professional, Rich Siegenthaler, has a few recommendations to get you started and make sure you’re on the right path to complete employee wellbeing.

Expand Beyond Traditional Wellness Programs

Traditional wellness programs put surface programs at the forefront – think: step challenges – while these are important, the industry is changing and what employees are looking for is changing.

Integrate Mental Health Programs

For years, mental health has been something that both employees and employers have strayed away from discussing with each other. However, as mental health conditions are spreading rapidly – with issues like anxiety, depression and worry being dealt with by people everywhere – employers can’t afford to not offer these types of programs as part of their wellbeing plans.

Provide Financial Wellness Programming

The number one stressors in American households today are financial. While employees do need to understand how to invest their resources in traditional ways (like 401Ks), the new trend is to provide tools for employees to manage their day-to-day and month-to-month budgets. 

Many times, employees say they understand they need to put more into their 401K, but know that if they do, they will not be able to pay their bills.  Financial wellness programming helps people look at their earnings, bills and expenses, and learn how to manage them more effectively. It is a day-to-day management strategy that helps employees lead a more comfortable and accountable lifestyle when it comes to their financial health. 

Improve Communication

However you decide to start expanding your wellbeing program to a more complete package – communication is key. There will be growing pains, but in order to help lessen those, remember that your employees are people too. Open up the lines of communication to hear from your employees about what they’re looking for overall and what they are looking for in their wellbeing programs.

Before you do anything, the ultimate first step is to look at your workforce, your employee demographics and how your very own organization operates. Then, with these details in mind, alongside Rich’s recommendations above, you’ll be well on your way to a complete wellbeing program that benefits the employee AND the employer.


Learn more about bringing complete wellbeing to your employees with DHS Group’s HealthSpective Engage program here.

More on Employee Wellbeing and Wellness Programs:

From Employee Wellness to Wellbeing: Transforming Your Workforce

4 Big Employee Benefits Trends for Family Planning

How to Support Mental Health at Work

Employee Benefits Success is All About Communication

What’s Wrong With Wellness Program Incentives?

What Benefits Do Employees Want in 2019?

From Employee Wellness to Wellbeing: Transforming Your Workforce

From Employee Wellness to Wellbeing: Transforming Your Workforce

Best Money Moves and DHS Group are working together to transform employee wellness programs into employee wellbeing. DHS Group believes that employee wellbeing encompasses physical health, mental health and financial wellness. The opinions expressed in this blog belong to the author and DHS Group.

Regardless of whether you view employee wellness from the perspective of the industry professional, one who is tasked with finding and implementing wellness strategies for groups of employees or that of a participant engaged in wellness programming, you’re sure to have noticed a shift from “wellness” to an all-encompassing “wellbeing” strategy.

“Historically, employee wellness programs have had this focus on physical health – specifically through things like step programs and activity programming,” Jim Pritchett, DHS Group CEO, said. “However, we’re quickly seeing these programs expand to include more as people ask questions about pieces like mental health and [how to fix their] finances.”   

Will Herold, DHS Group’s VP of Employer Solutions, agrees. “A wellbeing approach is more of a holistic approach to help employees improve on all aspects of wellness – those being physical, mental, financial and health,” Herold said. “What we knew as ‘employee wellness’ only ever focused on one piece of the complete wellbeing pie.”

What’s behind the shift that’s changing employee wellness programs to define “health” more inclusively?

  1. The Expanding Mission of HR. While it may seem like common knowledge, HR and benefits managers realize that not every employee is at the same point in their life. With this realization, the mission and definition of “employee wellness” has expanded to include financial wellbeing training and mental health information – areas that some employees might need in order to solve issues and help them reach their full potential.
  2. Return on Investment (ROI). According to HR Magazine, “leaders of organizations with knowledge of their return on investment reported a return of $1 to $4 for every dollar spent” on employee wellbeing programs. While the true return is often difficult  to quantify, the benefits for employees themselves – better overall wellbeing – is highly valuable.
  3. Improving Employee Satisfaction. “As employees are more satisfied with their lives outside of work (reduced stress and financial stability) they have healthy behaviors that often reflect on their work life as well,” Herold said.
  4. Recruit and Retain Employees. “Free beer isn’t enough anymore,” is almost a cliche in the recruitment world because employees are looking for more when weighing both current and future employers, including retirement options, healthcare benefits and wellbeing options.

At the end of the day, benefits and employee wellbeing programs need to be about engaging employees and encouraging them  to improve – not just their physical health, but their mental and financial health as well – which is where DHS Group’s HealthSpective Engage platform comes in. It’s not just something that benefits the employee, but impresses a positive  impact on the employer as well.

“Our goal has always been to help companies achieve better health outcomes with lower costs,” Pritchett said. “With HealthSpective Engage, companies can both enhance their benefits system – adding pieces like financial wellbeing to the puzzle – and simplify the process. A decision that ultimately helps companies improve their population health and leads to employees and families that are healthier in multiple areas of their life and not just one single focus.”

Learn more about bringing complete wellbeing to your employees with DHS Group’s HealthSpective Engage program, including Best Money Moves, now an official part of DHS Group’s HealthSpective offering.