A couple of months ago I was, just like many of your employees, trying to make sense of a benefits annual enrollment guide. This one, from my husband’s employer. And, this long, technical and hard-to-read guide was the only resource I had. If I wanted more, I would need to call a central office and wait on hold. I knew my feelings were not uncommon: How was anyone supposed to understand the guide and read through all the information? Why couldn’t this be quick and easy? I wanted to know more about the plans and make a quick decision, but as an insert alerted me, the guide was already outdated. How could I be sure I even had the right information? And, how on earth does this still happen, when technology has made information instantaneous and put it at our fingertips?
I spend my days advising benefits managers and communicators that benefits and wellness information (and especially annual enrollment details!) need to reach employees and their families in engaging ways. Our benefits and wellness messages have to keep up, or risk being ignored completely. And, what’s exciting about our job now is that we have new tools. Social media is an increasingly effective way to reach people in engaging (and cost-effective) ways. It cuts across demographics, it’s mobile, it’s fast and can be easily integrated into existing communication efforts.
Yet, we still hear resistance all the time. Despite case study after case study and great coverage of the simple ways social media can work for retirement, wellness and enrollment communication, many companies are still reluctant to push ahead and insist that this is still new unproven territory.
This is surprising given just how hard it is to not see social media changing our daily lives. Information Week recently released its own findings on social media use and found it was up 230% since 2007 and that two thirds of Americans now use Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and other social media sites. Web users already look to the Web for information on their health. And expectations are changing, the next generation is pushing the boundaries on what it wants online.
So, for most companies, open enrollment is coming, what’s a benefits manager to do?
Benefits communication has to be effective and get your employees and their families involved. It has to cut through the daily noise and get people motivated to take action. One guide, once a year, is not the answer. It’s about creating a conversation on an ongoing basis that will trigger something in someone to make a better choice. And, that’s where social media comes into play.
Get your benefits information on a benefits website outside of your firewall. It will not only reduce some of your printing costs, but give your employees and families an ongoing resource to answer their questions throughout the year. Remember, your employees are not always the primary decision makers when it comes to health care and they are not always your only audience. Add a blog to your website and now you’ve started a dialogue—and given yourself an easy, convenient (and cheap) way to keep your site fresh.
Twitter, Facebook, text messages, YouTube and others all have a place as part of your overall strategy. No, they are not your primary ways to communicate—nor is any one channel any longer. These new tools are great ways to support your objectives and are a great way to get information on events, deadlines and reminders out to your audience. If you’re interested in learning how you can use these tools for your benefits communication, check out our Social Media Cheat Sheet or our social media toolkit.
No, social media won’t replace all communication methods. But don’t be fooled. It’s growing as a communication vehicle—fast! The truth lies somewhere in the middle—you can and you should use social media as part of your overall communication strategy. The challenge for all of us is to create an integrated strategy—one where we can reach our audiences in multiple mediums and ones they prefer. We owe it to our employees to tell them what we know. Over and over again and by every means available. A one-time letter is too often too little, too late.
And by the way, the annual enrollment guide I was reviewing for our health care decisions hit the recycling bin as soon as I was done completing the carbon copy enrollment form. Now we’re in the dark the rest of the year.