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Brilliant Benefits v. Boring Benefits

Why is it that employee benefits is so… well, boring? In too many organisations, all the attention is on the cash elements of the rewards package: salary, bonuses, sales comp or long-term incentives. Benefits, in my experience, are too often taken for granted. Here in Asia, employee benefits practices are generally very immature, compared to western practices. There is very little creativity, deviation from market norms or risk taking. We design compensation programs, in addition to annual benchmarking; but benefits are simply benchmarked and recalibrated in most Asian organizations, as I see it. Not enough benefits design is taking place in this part of the world. Not nearly enough.

In the U.S. and Europe, where salaries are generally much higher, the art and science of effective benefits design is very mature, highly sophisticated and there are many examples of flexible, personal, thoughtful, socially responsible, tax-effective, inclusive, well-communicated and consumer-driven benefits practices. Funding mechanisms, portability rules, carry-over provisions, pooling and other features and practices make the benefits practices of many companies really stand out. There are some very brilliant benefits practices out there. (Mercer recently issued highlights of research on popular voluntary benefits, by region:  Infographic by Mercer Insights)

Yet, in many emerging markets–even developed ones like Singapore or Hong Kong–benefits practices often simply follow the herd.

Why is this? In my experience both in the U.S. and in Asia Pacific, I have seen the following factors limit the effectiveness of benefits practices in much of Asia:

The potential for brilliant benefits practices is just enormous. Generally, American and European rewards professionals get this, and they compete for talent using their benefits arsenal just as much as cash rewards. In Asia, there is still a strong focus on cash in China, India, and most of Southeast Asia, as rising middle class talents seek to earn more in order to buy more and save more, and to fulfill filial obligations, while being taxed very heavily in most cases. But focusing on cash competition for your broad workforce is not sustainable (for key talent, yes, but not for the entire workforce). The BPO/Call Center industry in the Philippines is now larger than in India, largely because years and years of annual salary increases ranging from 8-14% in India have reduced or eliminated their low-cost advantage compared to The Philippines, where industry salary increases have been in the 6-8% range. (There is also some debate as to whether English is spoken with less accent in the Philippines as well!)

Managing cash compensation effectively will always be vital, and will continue to require brilliant, creative and unique approaches, to win the talent war. But those organisations that can devote their attention to the benefits area will quickly find a universe of great ideas and opportunities, and by seizing upon these ideas, can emerge as an employers of choice within their industry.

Asia–start thinking benefits.

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