Do Employees Understand Their Benefits Package?

Do Employees Understand Their Benefits Package?

In this week’s Best Money Moves roundup, we take a look at news stories and new research studies that may impact employee benefits and HR issues. We hope you find this news roundup helpful, and we’d love your feedback.

Do employees understand their benefits package? A new study from The Guardian Life Insurance Company of America found that less than half of workers have a good understanding of how their employee benefits work and how to best use them.

As a result, 79 percent of working Americans surveyed said they feel serious concerns related to their finances. This in turn makes them more distracted and less productive at work because their minds are on their own financial stress rather than the task at hand.

So what can employers do to help their employees reduce financial stress and build financial confidence? Read on for four ways businesses can help improve employees’ financial outcomes and lower their level of financial stress.

Tech-savvy Millennials can bring a fresh perspective to a company, but their tendency to job-hop can also bring HR headaches. A recent study found that two-thirds of Millennials plan to leave their current gigs in the next four years. Try these three strategies to make your company a place where young workers will want to stay.

Got an open executive position at your company? You don’t want to hire just anyone to fill important leadership roles. This is why many companies look beyond submitted resumes and start recruiting potential candidates who already have another position. Here’s how you can poach (and keep!) top talent in your industry.

While the improving housing market is great for homeowners, millions of potential buyers are finding themselves priced out of the market. Help your employees combat housing-related financial stress.

Are your company’s employees happy with their benefits plans? They may not be, according to a new study by the Transamerica Center for Health Studies. Learn why the study found a communication disconnect between employers and their workers regarding benefits satisfaction.

Everyone loves to be told they’re doing a good job, and getting kudos from a coworker may be even more impactful than hearing it from a manager. Here’s how coworker recognition programs can help improve your bottom line.

Employee wellness programs can be a big investment with great payoffs over time, but only if the program is a good fit for your company culture and employees. Make sure you don’t forget these four often-overlooked steps when building your wellness program.

Keeping employees engaged in the workplace is essential for retention. If they don’t feel connected to their company and coworkers, they’ll be more likely to jump ship if another offer comes along. These are the factors most likely to boost employee engagement this year.

We use self-service portals to do everything from online banking to buying concert tickets. But did you know these online portals can also be time- and money-saving tools for your employee benefits programs? Read up on seven ways these tools can simplify your HR processes.

Which perks are most appealing to today’s employees? Top employers are branching out to entice talent with everything from corporate outings to house-cleaning services to “Whiskey Fridays.” Steal these ideas from Facebook, Google and Netflix.

 

Have something to add? Email info@bestmoneymoves.com.

It’s hard to stay on top of everything in the news. That’s why each week our Best Money Moves newsroom will bring you the most important news in financial wellness, employee benefits and financial stress. We hope you like the information and, if you do, please spread the word. For midweek developments, follow us on Twitter and on Facebook.

How Financial Stress Rises with Your Rent and Home Expenses

How Financial Stress Rises with Your Rent and Home Expenses

There are certain expenses everyone deals with no matter how extravagant or restrained their lifestyle. Housing is at the top of the list, both because you need a place to hang your hat and because it’s usually the single largest bite out of your monthly take-home pay.

Unfortunately, this is the most basic and important of expenses. Whether it’s a house, apartment or condo, everyone needs a place to live and this basic expense can quickly become your biggest source of financial stress.

According to a September National Rent Report by Zumper, eight of the 10 most expensive rental markets in the country have either maintained their spot or moved higher on the list, even as prices for one and two-bedroom units dropped slightly for the first time all year. This might sound like business as usual but for employees looking to decrease their financial stress, it’s bad news for their budgets.

Employees can downsize their budgets in many ways, from cutting meals out to limiting their entertainment spending, but housing is a relatively fixed cost and it’s hard to find wiggle room until your lease comes up for renewal. And then, where do you go if rents are rising everywhere you want to be? one staple that has lost most of its wiggle room. If you want to know what your employees are stressed about, housing is one area you can’t ignore.

What’s the fix?

The recommended rule for figuring out how much to budget for housing is to cap it at 30 percent of your income, leaving at least 60 percent of your budget for other expenses like food, healthcare, debt payments and savings. The problem for an increasing number of employees is that these figures have made maintaining this ratio difficult. If employees want to spend under $1,000 each month on rent, for example, they’ll need to look to the 30th most expensive city on this list, downsize the space they live in, move to another neighborhood or find an alternate way to manage rising rent or housing expenses. And until they can make this change, they’ve got less room in their budgets for other necessities.

Changing a housing situation isn’t impossible, but it is a recurring cost people are locked into for months or years at a time, that will affect them every day. If that cost climbs too high, or there is an unexpected jump, it creates a cycle where that cost eats into the rest of their finances, increasing their financial stress and keeping them from making progress with their budgets, debts and retirement savings.

As an employer, you want to help defray this expense but may be at a loss for where to start. There are small  steps you can take, like offering transit assistance for your workers’ commutes or opportunities to work remotely, but the root of the problem is much deeper.  

Employees have to get control over their budgets and learn how they can change their housing situation for the better. For some cities, moving to a new neighborhood may be the only viable option, but it’s one your employees have to discover in order to take action.

If you want to reduce financial stress in your workplace, talk to your employees and see what assistance they need. With the right knowledge and tools, they can decide on a solution that gets them to a stronger financial position. They can’t count on a major drop in their rent (it’s an expense that tends to rise over time), so it’s time to find a new way around this cost and get it back down to the recommended 30 percent threshold.

Whether it’s small changes or a big move, there’s no better time to get started than right now. You’ll be amazed at what a small savings on housing can do for the rest of the monthly bills and, consequently, your employees’ financial stress level.

 

Dustin Pellegrini is a senior web producer and writer at Think Glink Media, where he specializes in reporting credit and personal finance topics. He studied writing and visual media at Columbia College Chicago.

Employees’ Financial Stress Mounts as Millions Are Priced Out of the Housing Market

Employees’ Financial Stress Mounts as Millions Are Priced Out of the Housing Market

Economists and industry experts have been trumpeting the recovery of the housing market, which is good news for anyone who already owns one.

But that recovery isn’t necessarily good news for people looking to buy a new home. In fact, it’s pushing the dream of homeownership farther out of reach for millions of Americans.

The Wall Street Journal reports that while home prices rose in 83 percent of the nation’s major real estate markets last quarter to just 2 percent below their July 2006 peak, those gains are due mostly to a lack of new supply, not an increase in buyers.

Unfortunately, there aren’t a lot of new homes being built yet and those that already exist are getting more expensive, making it more difficult for people to achieve a major part of the American Dream.

On top of that, potential buyers (including many of your employees) may still be struggling with damaged credit, huge student loans and tougher post-recession credit standards.

This helps explain why 200,000 to 300,000 fewer households are buying a new home each year than we would see under “normal” market conditions and overall homeownership has hit a 51-year low of 62.9 percent. (And, this in a time where mortgage interest rates are just about at all-time lows.) The situation forces folks to continue renting a place to live, which causes rents to rise due to this increased demand, further stretching their finances and reducing their ability to save more money for a downpayment on a home.

See how the cycle feeds itself?

While you can’t control the real estate market, you can control your finances (to some extent). That’s where Best Money Moves comes in. We help employees dial down their financial stress, strengthen their financial foundation and put their version of the American Dream – whether it’s buying that house with a white picket fence or retiring early – within reach.

We do so by helping you dial into your biggest financial stressors and providing the education, resources and personalized advice from accredited money coaches you need to help you take back control.

Sound like something your company (or its employees) could use? Email us at ilyce@bestmoneymoves.com to learn how you can get a free trial.