Business Is Personal in Times of Crisis

COVID-19 changed the way people work and, consequently, how they communicate. In the weeks following the start of the pandemic, companies raced to find ways to keep their employees working remotely, and in-person connections gave way to emails and Zoom calls. 

Artemis Health found that employers are prioritizing employees’ experiences, citing increased productivity, better employee satisfaction and improved health and well-being as their top priorities. Cutting costs is still important, but consider this: Research from the MIT Sloan School of Management shows when companies create great experiences for their workers, they have higher levels of customer satisfaction, are more innovative, and even have 25% higher profits. 

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Unlike most things, healthcare services have an inverse relationship between cost and quality: the better the quality, the lower the cost. Unfortunately, the current health benefits market is completely opaque and lacking any meaningful, realistic transparency. Additionally, we have always been taught that easy = better when designing health benefits programs for employers and their employees. However, the cost and quality of healthcare can vary dramatically within the same city. Utilization Management for example, where your members access healthcare, is one of the single most important additions to your health plan design.

Thanks to the strictures of COVID-19, employees’ experiences with their benefits programs will be largely digital, but that doesn’t mean they have to be impersonal. Employers can bolster workers’ attitudes by designing education and outreach programs that center on their needs. 

Be proactive 

Almost half of an employer’s healthcare spending is consumed by 6% of its employees, according to Mercer data. By being proactive instead of reactive, employers can head off expensive claims and build trust between employees and providers, who are communicating throughout the program year instead of just in times of crisis.

Plans can use health risk assessments and claims analytics to identify the highest risk patients, and design communications and interventions around their needs, according to Marathon Health. Marathon contacted over 260,000 employees through its outreach program between March and August, and estimates that it helped them save on average $2,000 per worker, resulting in $22.5 million in savings for employers.  

Be persistent 

It’s not enough to give employees a benefit packet during open enrollment and hope they make good healthcare decisions. Most workers don’t even read their benefits materials, and when it comes time to choose a treatment or provider, stressed-out workers tend to focus on the upsides of their decision and ignore the downsides. 

More dynamic messaging can help employers connect with members throughout the year, and give them an opportunity to intervene when employers are weighing a decision. For example:

  • Text messaging. Outbound text messages have higher open rates — 98% — than email, and a 209% higher response rate than phone, email or even Facebook. 
  • Company chat platforms. With more workers dispersed in remote offices or at home, chat tools like Slack or Microsoft Teams are replacing quick stops by a colleague’s office. Employers can pin updates, nudges or disclosures where workers will see them. 
  • Chat bots. For answers to routine questions, chatbots can help members find information quickly and easily, and direct them to their benefits manager for more complex questions. 

Be personal 

Today’s workforce is diverse, with as many as five different generations on the payroll, and many companies have explicit diversity and inclusivity mandates. Willis Towers Watson found that those initiatives create a sense of belonging among employees who look around and see that they’re not alone. 

Diverse workers have different needs and priorities, so the same messaging won’t work for everyone. Employers are increasingly turning to tech to provide their workers with decision support tools, including at the enrollment phase (78%), when making treatment decisions (65%), and when choosing where to receive care (48%), according to Willis Towers Watson.

Those tools are correlated with better outcomes, too. Half of the best performers identified by Willis Towers Watson offer treatment decision support, compared to just 37% of the high-cost companies. The impact of enrollment decision support was even more significant: 62% of the best performers offered that kind of support, compared to 35% of high-cost firms. 

COVID-19 has taught employers painful lessons about their ability to withstand a crisis. Businesses that take those lessons and adapt will be more resilient. By keeping employees’ experiences at the center of their benefits design strategy, employers can overcome workers’ typical barriers to action and build higher member satisfaction, and better company performance.