|
Today’s workforce has come
to expect a comprehensive benefits plan as part of overall compensation.
This article will help you navigate through some pros and cons and
other considerations of different core benefit options, and provide
you with some questions to ask yourself as you determine the right
benefits for your employees – and your small business.
Core benefits
In its most recent survey of employee benefits offered by small
businesses, the U.S. Department of Labor found that paid leave was
the most frequently available benefit for full-time workers, followed
by health insurance, a retirement plan, and life insurance. Those
findings are echoed by the latest private-sector research there
are certain “core” benefits that today’s small
business employees expect.
Let’s look closely at each.
- Paid leave – Employees expect you to
be far more flexible with time off than ever before. Granting
paid leave is a costly benefit, but the good news is that the
benefits of a fair paid leave policy can far outweigh the costs
in the form of employees who are more engaged and productive.
So, ask yourself these questions:
How much paid leave can you afford each year?
Does your paid leave policy mesh with the requirements of the Family
and Medical Leave Act and with state laws? Does unused leave
carry over from one year to the next?
Are employees eligible for more leave after a certain number of years
with the company?
- Health insurance – Employees consistently
rank health care coverage as one of the most important employee
benefit. Which program you implement depends on how you choose
to balance the issues of costs, quality of care, and accessibility.
Contact your state department of insurance to learn about small
business group health providers in your area. The three most popular
programs that businesses provide are:
- Traditional indemnity plans allow employees
to choose their own physicians but tend to be more costly.
- HMOs (health maintenance organizations)
can help minimize employers’ costs by putting greater
limits on the choice of primary care providers.
- PPOs (preferred provider organizations)
offer a broad choice of health care providers but can be more
expensive than HMOs.
- Retirement plans – A strong retirement
plan ranks just behind health insurance as a staple in any small-business
benefits package. Employees are paying closer attention to their
retirement plans than ever before. Whatever the size of your business,
there is a galaxy of retirement plans from which to choose, ranging
from individual retirement accounts (IRAs) to simplified employee
pensions (SEPs) to popular 401(k) plans, to name a few. While
no two companies will implement the exact same retirement plan,
financial planners stress that all small businesses should first
get solid answers to the following:
- Does the plan require a minimum contribution each year?
- Will the plan’s provisions accommodate your company’s
growth?
- What are the tax implications?
- What are the ages of your key employees?
- What investment options do employees have, and will you
match employee 401(k) contributions?
- What sort of training does the plan provide employees?
- Life insurance – Small businesses typically
offer their employees a group term life insurance policy. Such
policies cover employees only while they are working for your
business. In most cases, employers cover the basic premiums; if
additional coverage is offered, employees generally pay the extra
cost. The amount of the benefit is commonly a year’s salary
(employees wanting to increase the size of the benefit usually
assume the extra cost).
Thinking outside the box
What other things are today’s cutting-edge small businesses
doing to keep their most valued employees? Workplace specialists
point to a number of creative “people” strategies that
are proving increasingly effective at cultivating employee loyalty.
The most popular offerings include wellness programs, backup childcare
services, education assistance (including college advising services),
and flexible work arrangements.
Finding the right mix
The Small Business Administration recommends that you tackle the
following questions before signing off on any benefits package.
Your answers will help you focus in on the kind of benefits, and
how many, to offer your employees:
- How much are you willing to pay for coverage?
- What kinds of benefits interest your employees? Do you want
employee input?
- What do you want a benefits plan to accomplish? Is it more
important to protect your employees from economic hardship now
or in the future?
- Is a good medical plan more important than a retirement plan?
Why?
- Do you want to administer the benefits plan, or do you want
the administration handled by an insurance carrier?
- What is your employee group like today? Can you project what
it might look like in the future?
Finally, make it a policy to review your company’s total benefits
package at least once a year. It is the best way to ascertain that
the benefits you offer are in line with the needs and expectations
of your evolving workforce.
|