Tuesday, April 14, 2020

Coronavirus Crisis as Catalyst: Change the Way You Look at Your Rewards Structure

I saw these words this morning: "Your brain isn't resistant to change; it is lazy." Can we extend that? Is your corporate rewards program -- the way that you reward your employees for working for you -- resistant to change? Or is that change somehow always on the back burner?

You've looked at the survey data. You've heard the cries for help from employees. But, your rewards program remains right down the middle.

Perhaps you've tried some innovative ways to become an employer of choice. You put the ping pong table and beer keg in the break room. Alas, it didn't reduce turnover. It didn't make your employees happier (except when they hit the beer keg too often). It didn't reduce their real stresses even if it did mask them for a few minutes.

But, the crisis caused by the coronavirus pandemic has forced you to change the entire compact between you and your employees. They've forgotten their office space. The fancy espresso maker you provided them sits idly as they become reaccustomed to the coffee they make quickly in their own home. At the same time, they've likely created their own custom background for their Zoom calls. All of this, they have managed. In fact, if you've kept them employed and had to cut their pay a little bit, most of them have probably managed how to live on a little less.

What they haven't learned though is how to feel secure. They haven't figured out how they are going to deal with a health catastrophe or disability, but maybe the federal government will come to the rescue. Where the federal government has not promised to come to the resuce, even in the most grandiose of campaign speeches is in helping your employees to retire.

You remember retirement. It's what your parents did. Either or both of them worked for a company for a long time. They retired with a pension. Supplemented by Social Security and perhaps some savings, somewhere in their early to mid-60s, they stopped the daily grind and pursued all the hobbies that had been given short shrift while they were working. It was part of the "American Dream."

Not for you? You can't even dream of it?

Look back at what I said a few paragraphs ago. Most of them have probably managed to live on a little less.

Let's do some oversimplified math to figure out how we are going to use this to become an employer of choice again. Consider Taylor, a good employee.

Pre-coronavirus, your basic costs for Taylor included:

  • Base pay: 100,000
  • Health benefits: 25,000
  • Other non-retirement benefits: 5,000
  • Retirement benefits: 4,000
  • Total: 134,000
With coronavirus, you've had to cut Taylor's pay by $10,000. So, the equation now looks like this:

  • Base pay: 90,000
  • Health benefits: 25,000
  • Other non-retirement benefits: 4,800 (a couple of benefits had a pay-related component)
  • Retirement benefits: 3,600
  • Total: 123,400
At some point, this crisis will end. And, during the crisis, Taylor may have learned to live on $90,000 instead of $100,000. She would love to get that full $10,000 back, but since she has learned to live on it, that's not what's keeping her up at night. 

During her new social distancing life, Taylor has taken to ever family search website she can find: 23 and Me, Ancestry, MyHeritage, and more. She's learned that going back four generations, the women in her family are long-lived. That's great news for Taylor, right?

Not really. As the she saw the stock market fall and her bank decrease the interest rate on her savings account to 0.01%, Taylor wondered how she can ever afford to retire. After all, she guesses, based on her genealogical research that she will probably live to be about 95. And, after she retires at age 62 (she learned she can start collecting Social Security then), that leaves her with a 33-year retirement. She's going to have to pay for it somehow.

As her employer, you can be the solution to her problem and be an employer of choice. After all, you don't want to lose a great employee like Taylor. And, you've committed that you are willing to spend $134,000 on her total rewards.

Before we do that, let's think about what Taylor is not good at. Like many in her age group and yours and mine and everybody else's, she's not good at financial planning. What you can do to help is to create a nest egg for her. And, don't do it so that some day, she gets a pot of cash from the company, give her lifetime income.

So, let's reconfigure the $134,000.
  • Base pay: 95,000 (she learned to live on 90,000)
  • Health benfits: 25,000
  • Other non-retirement benefits: 4,900
  • 401(k): 3,800
  • Subtotal: 128,700
You have $5,300 left to spend. That's 5.5% of pay. 

I don't care what you call it, but now is the time to call it something. Take that 5.5% of pay and allocate it to Taylor's lifetime income. Sell it to your employees until you can't sell it anymore. Tell them you are giving them this plan because you want them for their careers. And, tell them you are giving it to them because some day, you want them to be able to gracefully exit their careers and to do so without fear of outliving that little 401(k) nest egg that isn't worth what it was before coronavirus hit.

Once they get that benefit, your best employees won't leave.

Make the best of the coronavirus crisis. Let it be a catalyst for a great change.