Tuesday, December 26, 2017

What Motivates Best in the Workplace?


For years we have followed LinkedIn discussions from a variety of groups such as the Harvard Business Review, HR Professionals Worldwide and LinkedIn HR.  There are a tremendous number of knowledgeable HR professionals on these sites and subjects and discussion topics that can keep you involved for hours. 

“What Motivates Best in the Workplace” is a topic from a while back that brought responses from HR professionals from literally from every corner of the world.  We often see the employee engagement we deal with on a daily basis as particular only to our own culture, but they are not.  Everyone has to deal with them to one degree or another.  What is interesting is that there is a lot of commonality in the answers, regardless of the cultures. 

The topic question above added some subtext to it to stimulate the responses.  This subtext included:  “Is it money, personal ambition, team, leadership, all of the above? When faced with a demotivated workforce, what common thing among people consistently brings out the best in us all?”

If you would like to read the string of responses from places like Saudi Arabia or India, please click here.  We think you will find it interesting

For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net

Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Have a Wonderful and Safe Holiday Season


All of us at Ultimate Choice wish you and your family a safe Holiday Season and Healthy and Happy New Year.


Thank you for your support this past year and we sincerely appreciate the trust you’ve placed in us to provide you with the finest gift card recognition award system to achieve your objectives.  

Tuesday, December 12, 2017

Designing the Best Workplace Wellness Program


As discussed in our last post, wellness programs have been around for at least two decades but there is a surprising lack of empirical evidence that they achieve their stated goals.  The reason according to the experts is that they are rarely designed and implemented properly.  This paper by Johns Hopkins provides sound advice on ways to make a wellness program successful.  Following we have listed some of that advice. 

Administering health risk assessments only
Simply surveying employees for risk and even providing the screenings and other health tests does not motivate change.  You must give your employees tools like making wellness activities convenient and accessible and give them the ability to track their behavior.

Give it time
Health change is a process that needs to be sustained.  It will take up to five years to start to lower health care costs and decrease health care use.  You won’t change poor health habits by just asking employees to fill out a questionnaire.

Long term financial incentive programs are popular but not necessarily effective
Inducements to motivate change are based on behavioral theory of consequences that drive behavior.  Consequences must be positive, immediate and certain to be effective.  Financial incentives are certainly positive, but very uncertain when dealing with health change and never immediate. Large incentives that an tie as much as 20% of the cost of health coverage to achieving a health goal are very rare.  

Offering smart incentives
There is strong evidence that incentives to drive participation rates, preferably $ 50 to $100 will keep employees engaged and motivated to begin efforts to achieve self-determined health goals can be effective. 

Short term promotions ineffective
Short term or random acts (Biggest Loser, Pedometer challenges etc.) may be good to add excitement at the beginning or your program but not effective in the long term. You need to concentrate more on long term progress. 

Effective communications are essential
A healthy company culture is built intentionally.  Use communications to build a total health model into every aspect of business practice, from company policies to everyday work activities. Use communications that’s supportive of career, emotional, financial, physical and social well-being – not just an health fair.  Strategic communication will lead to lead to greater engagement

Leadership commitment and support 
It should go without saying, but complete commitment from all executives and continued ongoing support at all management levels is critical to a successful health promotion.  They must also lead by example. 

You can’t impose workplace health
Workers must own the program, understand how they benefit and the company benefit and are given a role in the ongoing operation with regular surveys and focus groups.

There are a myriad of ideas and things that can be done to build a culture of health in your organization.  By searching those out and adhering to the above practices you have the best chance of implementing a program that will produce the long term results you are looking for.

For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net



Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Do Workplace Wellness Programs Really Improve Worker’s Health?


Workplace wellness programs have been around for more than a couple decades, but there is a surprising lack of empirical evidence that they achieve their stated goals.  Most any kind of programs that companies implement are evidence-based with statistics to back up the program performance.  For wellness programs there is scant evidence based information on whether they produced desired results.

Most of the data on wellness programs comes from the vendors who actually provide the programs and that data can be questionable and fraught with data gathering mistakes.  For example for weight loss programs they may show: weight changes only for those
participating in the program vs those who don’t; no before or after measurements to show changes based on the program vs other random variations; no analysis for workers who may have regained weight after the program; reporting average weight loss per those who lost weight, but not disclosing what actual percentage of employees lost weight, etc. It would seem that the wellness vendors want to report only successes, not failures.   
While the chief goal of a wellness program is to improve employee health, the companion
goal is to control healthcare spending. It is hard to get an accurate view of how well these programs work because many unsuccessful programs just aren’t reported.  However, these programs can work.  A study by Johns Hopkins provides evidence that when properly designed and implemented, a wellness program can add to the health and productivity of the employees and the profitability of the business. 

In addition, Johnson and Johnson has published dozens of studies showing their wellness programs have improved employee health, saved millions in health care costs and
enhanced employee productivity.  They designed their programs with the proper measurement and analysis as a starting point and continue throughout with smart collection and analysis of data. 

Without the data at hand, many companies pick and choose options for wellness programs blindly which can do a disservice to employees and their company.  In the end, you don’t necessarily need the latest fashion fitness wearable or new tennis shoes to start your program.  What you do need is sold analysis, data and the metrics necessary to prove the results on an ongoing basis

For more information on Ultimate Choice Inc.’s products or services or other white papers please contact us at Ultimatechoiceinfo@cox.net