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Article | Pensions Briefing

Creating a consumer-grade Total Rewards Experience at JetBlue

By Connor Simpson , Rich Veal and Grant Dale | December 11, 2019

Find out how leading organisations like JetBlue are moving beyond Total Rewards Statements and getting more value from their Total Rewards spend.
Retirement|Employee Experience|Ukupne nagrade |Health and Benefits|Compensation Strategy & Design
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Leading organisations are now communicating rewards with the ambition of motivating their people, driving appreciation and supporting decision making.

Think about how much you time and money you spend on your Total Rewards each year – across pay, core benefits, pension contributions, incentive plans, wellbeing initiatives, development opportunities, and the broader experience you offer at work. The effort that’s involved in administering your benefits and pension schemes.

Now think about how much effort goes into ensuring that employees appreciate and take control of everything they are offered by your organisation. For many companies, the lack of focus here creates a disconnect between the cost of providing reward programmes, and the perceived value of these programmes to employees. It also leads to employees not using their rewards effectively – think of the number of employees who don’t take advantage of matched pension contributions.

Traditionally, the approach to increasing the perceived value of Total Rewards was to issue a Total Rewards Statement – an annual letter posted to the houses of employees each year – which quantified the cost of each element of the rewards package and aimed to tell an employee, “Look how expensive you are”.

This approach has key limitations:

  • It’s inefficient and expensive. Posting letters to thousands of employees, and ensuring the data is accurate, is a costly and time-consuming process – missing out on all of the efficiencies of delivering online.
  • The information is always out of date. The annual backward-looking snapshot focuses on how much an employee earned last year but tells them nothing about the present or the future.
  • “Look how expensive you are” is not the right message. The focus should be on providing value for the employee, not on explaining the cost to provide life assurance or medical cover.

Life is expensive. There are a lot of benefits that I may have taken for granted. No longer!!”

Employee at JetBlue

Now, organisations are modernising their approach to communicating Total Rewards, creating an online experience aimed at changing behaviour. Willis Towers Watson’s approach is founded on three elements:

  • Simply inspire. By taking a consumer-grade approach, content is focused on creating motivation – inspiring, integrating and nudging the employee to take interest. We focus on the reason ‘why’ you should care and not just the ‘what’ you get.
  • Future focus. The intent is to help employees to focus on progress; to look ahead not back. Data and content is framed to help the employee better appreciate how they can get more from their package and how the package can grow with them.
  • Actively support. The behaviours we aim to drive are appreciation and action. The aim is to consider the likely decision employees might make and organise content in a way that intuitively supports better decision making.

8% While three quarters of organisations have technology linked to Total Rewards, only 8% use it well.

Source: 2018 Willis Towers Watson Modernising Total Rewards Survey

Improving the Total Rewards Experience at JetBlue

JetBlue, a US airline with over 23,000 Crewmembers, wanted to drive more value from its Total Rewards package. It spends over $2 billion each year on Total Rewards programmes, but these were under-utilised and appeared underappreciated.

Previously, JetBlue, like many employers, had sent paper statements to the homes of Crewmembers. These statements were generic, depersonalised and outdated – they helped Crewmembers to see the cost of their rewards in the past year, but did nothing to inspire, drive focus on the future or change behaviour. Wanting to increase appreciation of their array of benefits, JetBlue needed to create an engaging experience.

We worked with the airline to create an online experience that empowered personal decision making and helped Crewmembers to see the value of everything they were offered. Our solution was to create a personalised Total Rewards Experience.

Here’s how their experience changed:

  • Delivered online - Instead of receiving a letter to their home, once a year, that told Crewmembers how much they earned last year, they could access the site from any place and at any time and see up-to-date, future-focused information on their Total Rewards.
  • Focused on value - Instead of being presented with a list of numbers and seeing how much each of their benefits costed, Crewmembers were given the ability to optimise their Total Rewards and derive value. Data-driven personalisation allowed JetBlue to show its Crewmembers how much they could be getting by taking advantage of different programmes.
  • Creating an experience - Instead of a generic communication, JetBlue could connect people with the airline’s brand. As Willis Towers Watson’s technology is completely configurable, JetBlue could create a Total Rewards Experience that aligned with both its external brand and employer brand.

The result? Higher levels of engagement with Total Rewards, increased participation in the pension scheme, and greater utilisation of wellbeing programmes.

The result? Higher levels of engagement with Total Rewards, increased participation in their pension scheme, and greater utilisation of wellbeing programmes.

Employees now engage with their rewards an average of 12 times per year, in contrast to the once-a-year paper Total Rewards Statements they used to receive. Over 1,000 extra employees have enrolled in the pension plan, and over $1.4m extra has been paid in healthy rewards schemes. By creating a personalised Total Rewards Experience, JetBlue have been able to drive appreciation and engagement.

What’s the solution?

Find out more about creating a Total Rewards Experience at your organisation by requesting a demo here.

Authors

Talent & Rewards
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Global Practice Leader, Communication and Change Management
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Director, HR Software
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