Building Benefits That Employees Actually Value

As benefit costs continue to rise, many employers are asking the question: How can we deliver meaningful value to employees without dramatically increasing spending?

The answer may not be adding more benefits. Instead, it may be helping employees better understand, access, and appreciate the benefits already available to them.

Organizations frequently invest significant resources in health plans, retirement programs, wellness initiatives, employee assistance programs, and voluntary benefits. Yet utilization rates often remain surprisingly low. Employees can’t value benefits they don’t understand, and confusion frequently leads to underuse.

The Communication Gap

Annual enrollment meetings and benefits guides are important, but they are rarely enough. Employees face an ongoing stream of life events—marriage, parenthood, caregiving responsibilities, financial challenges, and health concerns—that affect their benefit needs throughout the year.

Leading employers are moving beyond enrollment-focused communication and adopting year-round benefits education strategies. They provide timely reminders, targeted resources, and practical examples that help employees connect available benefits to real-life situations.

  • New parents may need reminders about dependent coverage, parental leave, and flexible spending accounts.
  • Employees caring for aging parents may benefit from information about employee assistance programs, mental health resources, and caregiving support.
  • Early-career employees may need guidance on retirement planning and financial wellness programs.

When communication is tied to employee needs rather than administrative deadlines, engagement increases significantly. Clearly describing the benefit in plain language and using multiple formats (email, video, fact sheets, in-person meetings) can help boost employees’ understanding of their benefits.

Measuring Value Beyond Participation

Benefit success should not be measured solely by enrollment numbers. HR leaders should evaluate whether programs support broader organizational goals such as retention, productivity, engagement, and employee wellbeing.

  • Are employees aware of available resources?
  • Do employees understand how to access support?
  • Are benefits helping reduce workplace stress?
  • Do employees perceive the organization as caring about their wellbeing?

The answers often reveal opportunities to improve employee experience without introducing additional programs.

A Strategic Opportunity

In today’s competitive labor market, benefits remain one of the most visible expressions of an employer’s commitment to its workforce. Organizations that focus on communication, accessibility, and employee understanding can often achieve greater impact from existing investments than those that simply add new offerings.

The most effective benefits strategy is not necessarily the most expensive. It is the one employees understand, trust, and use.

Relational Advisors is a UBA Partner Firm.