Deloitte Insights delivers proprietary research designed to help organizations turn their aspirations into action.

DELOITTE INSIGHTS

  • Home
  • Spotlight
    • Weekly Global Economic Outlook
    • Top 10 Reading Guide
    • Celebrating Earth Month
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Resilience
  • Topics
    • Strategy
    • Economy & Society
    • Operations
    • Workforce
    • Technology
  • Industries
    • Consumer
    • Energy, Resources, & Industrials
    • Financial Services
    • Government & Public Services
    • Life Sciences & Health Care
    • Technology, Media, & Telecom
  • More from Deloitte Insights
    • About
    • Deloitte Insights Magazine
    • Press Room Podcasts
Deloitte.com
Deloitte Insights logo
  • SPOTLIGHT
    • Weekly Global Economic Outlook
    • Top 10 Reading Guide
    • Celebrating Earth Month
    • Resilience
    • Artificial Intelligence
  • TOPICS
    • Strategy
    • Economy & Society
    • Operations
    • Workforce
    • Technology
  • INDUSTRIES
    • Consumer
    • Energy, Resources, & Industrials
    • Financial Services
    • Government & Public Services
    • Life Sciences & Health Care
    • Technology, Media,& Telecom
  • MORE FROM DELOITTE INSIGHTS
    • About
    • Deloitte Insights Magazine
    • Press Room Podcasts
  • Welcome!

    For personalized content and settings, go to your My Deloitte Dashboard

    Latest Insights

    Creating opportunity at the intersection of climate disruption and regulatory change

    Article
     • 
    7-min read

    Better questions about generative AI

    Article
     • 
    2-min read

    Recommendations

    Tech Trends 2025

    Article

    TMT Predictions 2025

    Article

    About Deloitte Insights

    About Deloitte Insights

    Deloitte Insights Magazine, issue 33

    Magazine

    Topics for you

    • Business Strategy & Growth
    • Leadership
    • Operations
    • Marketing & Sales
    • Diversity, Equity, & Inclusion
    • Emerging Technologies
    • Economy

    Watch & Listen

    Dbriefs

    Stay informed on the issues impacting your business with Deloitte's live webcast series. Gain valuable insights and practical knowledge from our specialists while earning CPE credits.

    Deloitte Insights Podcasts

    Join host Tanya Ott as she interviews influential voices discussing the business trends and challenges that matter most to your business today. 

    Subscribe

    Deloitte Insights Newsletters

    Looking to stay on top of the latest news and trends? With MyDeloitte you'll never miss out on the information you need to lead. Simply link your email or social profile and select the newsletters and alerts that matter most to you.

Welcome back

To join via SSO please click on the key button below
Still not a member? Join My Deloitte

Designing work for well-being

by Jeff Schwartz, Brad Denny, David Mallon, Yves Van Durme, Maren Hauptmann, Ramona Yan, Shannon Poynton
  • Save for later
  • Download
  • Share
    • Share on Facebook
    • Share on Twitter
    • Share on Linkedin
    • Share by email
9 15 May 2020

Designing work for well-being Living and performing at your best

9 15 May 2020
  • Jeff Schwartz United States
  • Brad Denny United States
  • David Mallon United States
  • Yves Van Durme Belgium
  • Maren Hauptmann Germany
  • Ramona Yan China
  • Shannon Poynton United States
  • See more See more See less
    • Yves Van Durme Belgium
    • Maren Hauptmann Germany
    • Ramona Yan China
    • Shannon Poynton United States
  • Save for later
  • Download
  • Share
    • Share on Facebook
    • Share on Twitter
    • Share on Linkedin
    • Share by email
  • Our 2020 perspective
  • Learning by example
  • Pivoting ahead

​Integrating well-being into the design of work itself can strengthen the link between worker well-being and organizational performance, supporting well-being not just for individuals but for teams and for the organization at large.

2021 Global Human Capital Trends

Sign up to receive a copy of our new approach to Trends launching this winter

 

Worker well-being is a top priority today, largely because of the widespread belief that it supports organizational performance. Yet many organizations are missing the biggest opportunity for well-being to drive performance: integrating well-being into the design of work itself. Building well-being into work takes an organization’s focus beyond interventions to support individual well-being to address well-being for the broader team and for the organization at large. By doing so, organizations can restructure work in ways that help workers not only feel their best but perform at their best, strengthening the tie between well-being and organizational outcomes and fostering a greater sense of belonging overall.

The Readiness Gap: Well-being had the largest gap between importance and readiness across this year’s trends, with 80 percent of organizations saying worker well-being is important or very important for their success over the next 12–18 months, but only 12 percent saying they are very ready to address this issue.

 

Learn more

Explore the Human Capital Trends collection

Read more about Integrating tech and well-being

Watch the video

Learn about Deloitte's services

Order a copy of Work Disrupted, Deloitte's new book on the accelerated future of work

Explore 5 lessons from the pandemic for the future of work

Go straight to smart. Get the Deloitte Insights app

Create a custom PDF

Eighty percent of respondents to this year’s Global Human Capital Trends survey identified well-being as an important or very important priority for their organization’s success, making it the year’s top-ranked trend for importance. And it’s clear that organizations around the world have taken notice. Large employers in the United States spent an average of US$3.6 million on well-being programs in 2019, at a cost of US$762 per employee.1 The global corporate well-being market has grown at an accelerated 7 percent CAGR, and is likely to continue growing, rising from US$53.6 billion in 2018 and expected to reach US$90.7 billion by 2026.2

The investments made in the well-being space are for good reason. Ninety-five percent of HR leaders agree that burnout impacts employee retention,3 and a Limeade and Quantum Workplace study found that employees with higher well-being are more likely to feel engaged at work, enjoy their work, and recommend their organization.4 In our own survey this year, 94 percent of respondents agreed that well-being drives organizational performance to some extent.

However, a closer look at our survey findings reveals that the return on investment (ROI) in worker well-being may not be as strong as it could be. Sixty-one percent of our survey respondents said that their organizations are not measuring the impact of well-being on organizational performance at all, and those respondents whose organizations did measure well-being’s impact on performance were most likely to report that that impact lay largely in improving the workforce experience (figure 1). Fewer than half believed that their well-being strategy was positively affecting other business outcomes, such as the organization’s customer experience, financial outcomes, reputation, and innovation and adaptability.

Well-being drives improvements in workforce experience more often than any other business outcome

Why this gap in ROI? Let’s start with the fact that addressing well-being effectively isn’t a simple undertaking. While modern well-being strategies have historic roots in the occupational health programs established in the 19th century designed to make work safe, they have since evolved to encompass a wide set of programs around workers’ physical, financial, and even emotional health. The good news is that our survey respondents have recognized this shift, with the majority of respondents indicating that their well-being strategies focus, at a minimum, on the physical, mental, and financial health of their employees (figure 2).

But the impact of modern careers and the rise of phenomena such as workplace stress have raised the question of whether employers should be doing even more. A study of workers in the United States and the United Kingdom found that 94 percent report feeling stress at work, with one-third saying their stress level is high to unsustainably high.5 Fifty-four percent of workers report that their home life is negatively affected by work at least once a week, and more than 50 percent report sleep loss.6 This workplace stress brings physical health consequences as well, leading the World Health Organization to classify burnout “resulting from chronic workplace stress that has not been successfully managed” as a diagnosable health condition.7

Given the level of the investments that are already being made, and the fact that 96 percent of our respondents agreed that well-being was an organizational responsibility, it’s clear that this is an area that needs some additional focus and attention. The question is: Where should organizations go from here?

Well-being through the years in Global Human Capital Trends

What started the decade as a concern about worker overload has evolved into a complex discussion about the role of organizations not only in driving well-being, but in optimizing business performance by integrating well-being into the design of work. In 2014, our chapter on “The overwhelmed employee” explored ways to improve employee satisfaction, teamwork, and productivity by simplifying work in an always-on world. By 2018, we had seen an explosion in the digital well-being market, with more than US$2 billion in venture capital invested between 2016 and 2018.8 Our chapter on “Well-being: A strategy and a responsibility” examined the expansion of well-being into a diverse set of programs designed to protect employees’ health, social well-being, and emotional well-being, speaking to the growing recognition of well-being as a driver of organizational performance. That same year, “The hyper-connected workplace” began exploring the intimate link between work and well-being, including management’s decision to potentially not use certain digital tools based on their anticipated impact on culture and pace of communication within the organization. This year, we discuss how building well-being into work can not only yield increased benefits in productivity and organizational performance, but also drive the creation of meaningful work (a call to action in last year’s “From employee experience to human experience” chapter) and strengthen the relationship between the individual and the organization.

Our 2020 perspective

Unlike in prior years of Global Human Capital Trends, this year, we had two trends that rose to the top with almost identical importance scores: well-being and belonging. We believe that both of these topics rose to the top because they pointed to a real challenge that many organizations are grappling with in the age of the social enterprise: How can they take something so personal and translate it into something that can have a broader impact beyond the individual?

In our chapter on belonging, we reported that our survey found that organizations need to foster belonging on three levels: comfort, where workers feel respected and treated fairly; connection, where workers have strong relationships with colleagues and teams; and contribution, where workers can see and appreciate the impact they are having on the organization’s goals at large. We believe there is an opportunity to look at well-being through a similar lens. While comfort has been enabled with a focus on occupational health and safety, and a connection to the workplace has been made by bringing a focus on life to work, contribution remains unresolved overall. That is because well-being programs often focus on the individual at work, rather than the individual in work. To be able to create a sense of contribution that translates into true organizational performance, organizations need to expand their focus from programs adjacent to work to designing well-being into the work itself.

Redesigning work around well-being can yield impressive results. Microsoft Japan is an early example of an organization that experimented with this, reducing its work week from five days to four—with results that challenge the common perception that well-being and productivity are at odds. In addition to shortening the work week, Microsoft Japan changed certain aspects of the way its people worked: Employees were asked to use a digital chat tool rather than email and to limit meetings to just 30 minutes and five people.9

The changes that Microsoft Japan put into place are only one of the many ways in which organizations can design work for well-being. Our research shows that a focus on well-being can be achieved by making thoughtful adjustments to how, when, where, and by whom the work is done. It could mean structuring work so that performance does not depend on any single individual, making it possible for all workers and leaders to take meaningful leaves of absence. It can mean giving workers more control over when and where they work so that they can work at the times and places that they feel most productive. And it could mean giving workers access to additional human or material resources in situations where stressors, whether physical or mental, could compromise individual or team performance.

Our survey results revealed a number of different tactics that organizations use today to bring well-being more to the forefront (figure 3). But despite the options available, relatively few organizations have recognized or acted upon them as part of an integrated strategy. Seventy-nine percent of this year’s respondents report that their organization’s strategy does not explicitly seek to integrate well-being into the design of work—representing a huge missed opportunity.

Organizations identified a variety of tactics to redesign work around well-being

To start the process of integrating well-being into the design of work, we believe there are three critical steps to consider. First, organizations should establish the right level of ownership for well-being—ownership by the group that has the greatest ability to influence the design of work. Second, organizations should spend the time to understand their workforce’s well-being needs—starting with the organizational and HR data that is now at their fingertips. And third, organizations should put processes in place to engage employees in work design deliberations—recognizing that the more that individuals are involved in the design process, the greater the chance that the changes made will have a positive, long-lasting impact.

With regard to ownership for well-being, our survey responses revealed a mixed bag (figure 4). While HR was the most often-cited owner, organizations also reported ownership of well-being by frontline managers, functional or department leaders, and, in some cases, even the C-suite. While there will never be a one-size-fits-all approach to ownership, our survey results show that ownership of well-being by HR is a solid strategy: When we looked at organizations that were more and less mature with respect to well-being, we found that the organizations with the most mature well-being strategies were those where HR was the primary owner.10 Regardless of who owns well-being, it’s critical that they have the ability to influence the design of work as well. As indicated in our closing chapter—“A memo to HR”—we believe that the ownership of work is a huge opportunity for HR to expand their impact and shift from a focus on cultivating the talent of today to imagining the work of tomorrow.

HR is most often cited as the party responsible for well-being

With all of the HR, employee, and organizational data available today, there is a great opportunity to gain insights into workers’ needs related to well-being and to build those needs into the design of work. A global footwear and apparel company did just that when it analyzed its global employee engagement survey results and recognized a growing need for workers to have more and better access to rest and recovery. In response, the company increased workers’ autonomy over work by introducing a new flexible time-off program. The program, which gave employees more jurisdiction over their work schedules, had a positive effect on corporate culture and improved collaboration and teaming across the organization.11

Other organizations are developing new tools to collect workforce well-being data. Researchers at the Mayo Clinic developed a Well-Being Index that measures multiple dimensions of well-being among doctors, nurses, medical students, and other health care workers.12 The tool, which assesses dimensions of distress and well-being such as likelihood of burnout, meaning in work, and work-life integration, has been used with more than 120,000 providers, allowing organizations to improve the workplace based on “data, not guesses.”13

Finally, worker input is critical to understand what changes to work practices may have the greatest impact on well-being. In Germany, labor unions have started to promote “health circles”—systematic, structured workshops where workers discuss ways to minimize or eliminate health risks and other stress factors in their day-to-day work. These health circles are already being used in German governmental administration units, manufacturing organizations, and public institutions, empowering employees to redesign their own work to maximize both well-being and performance.14 In one German hospital system, workers’ feedback guided key work changes to mitigate common sources of stress, including better scheduling, new systems for clearer communication, empowering employees to make decisions, and changes to avoid overloading short-staffed teams. A study found that these efforts improved both work quality and worker health.15

Learning by example

One example of an organization that has integrated well-being into the design of work is the early childhood education company Learning Care Group. Learning Care Group recognized a need to support teachers’ well-being as they handle stressful situations in the classroom—especially given that 95 percent of the behaviors that teachers consider to be challenging are developmentally appropriate.16 To do this, Learning Care Group implemented a series of changes—including changing the physical design of classrooms to enhance teacher-child interactions, updating the curriculum with new content, and offering new or refreshed resources to teachers—to create a more positive work environment. Learning Care Group even introduced new technologies into the classroom, including an app, myPath, that provides on-demand resources and strategies when teachers encounter challenging student behaviors such as hitting and biting. Not only have these changes built resilience among its teachers to handle high-stress situations, but Learning Care Group has also seen lower disenrollment of children and higher teacher retention since making these changes.17

Pivoting ahead

Given the immense pressure on organizations to promote worker well-being, it’s no surprise that organizations have grasped at a large number of levers to do so. But to date, almost all of these efforts have focused on the health and well-being of individuals, rather than the well-being of the entire worker population through the redesign of work. Organizations that integrate well-being into work may find that it reduces the need for remediation of work’s negative effects, freeing up resources to invest in other areas and increasing individual and team contributions to organizational outcomes. In this way, building well-being into the work becomes an effort that can yield immediate benefits in productivity while paying ongoing dividends by driving meaningful work, greater worker resilience, and higher organizational performance, setting the stage for long-term success.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Hebe Boonzaaijer, Pete DeBellis, Jen Fisher, Jill Korsh, and Sophia Savvides for their contributions to this chapter.

Cover image by: Matthieu Forichon

Endnotes
    1. Jessica Kent, “Large employers to average $3.6M on wellness programs in 2019,” HealthPayerIntelligence, April 23, 2019. View in article

    2. Grand View Research, Corporate wellness market size, share & trends analysis report by service (health risk assessment, fitness, smoking cessation), by end use, by category, by type, by delivery model, by region, and segment forecasts, 2020–2027, February 2020. View in article

    3. Kronos, “The employee burnout crisis,” survey brief, 2017. View in article

    4. Limeade and Quantum Workplace, 2016 well-being & engagement report, 2016. View in article

    5. Brianna Hansen, “Crash and burnout: Is workplace stress the new normal?,” Wrike, September 6, 2018. View in article

    6. Ibid. View in article

    7. World Health Organization, “Burn-out an ‘occupational phenomenon’: International classification of diseases,” May 28, 2019. View in article

    8. Global Wellness Institute, “Global Wellness Institute releases report and survey on ‘the future of wellness at work,’” press release, February 17, 2016. View in article

    9. Kazuaki Nagata, “Four-day workweek boosted productivity by 40%, Microsoft Japan experiment shows,” Japan Times, November 5, 2019. View in article

    10. Mature organizations were defined as those whose respondents said that their well-being strategy was comprehensive and integrated into the way the organization designs work and develops its workforce experience to provide purpose and meaning. View in article

    11. Work performed at global footwear and apparel company by Deloitte. View in article

    12. Mayo Clinic, “Go beyond burnout: Well-being index,” accessed March 10, 2020. View in article

    13. Ibid. View in article

    14. Unfallversicherung Bund und Bahn (UVB), Gesundheitszirkel, April 2015; Ulrich J. Wilken and Gregor Breucker, Mental health in the workplace, International Labour Office Geneva, 2000. View in article

    15. Lumity, Inc., “Job design: The missing link for employee well-being,” February 11, 2019. View in article

    16. Lydia Cisaruk, “Positive behavior support app tackles the tantrum, puts help in quick reach,” press release, Learning Care Group, November 20, 2019. View in article

    17. Judy Fimiani (CHRO, Learning Care Group), interview with the authors, February 6, 2020. View in article

Show moreShow less

Topics in this article

Human Capital

​Deloitte's Human Capital professionals leverage research, analytics, and industry insights to help design and execute the HR, talent, leadership, organization, and change programs that enable business performance through people performance. 

Learn more
Get in touch
Contact
  • Arthur H. Mazor
  • Global Leader – Human Capital Practice
  • amazonr@deloitte.com
  • +1 404 631 3917

Download Subscribe

Related content

img Trending

Belonging

Article 5 years ago
img Trending

Prologue

Article 5 years ago
img Trending

Introduction

Article 5 years ago
img Trending

The postgenerational workforce

Article 5 years ago

Explore the collection

  • Superteams Article5 years ago
  • Knowledge management Article5 years ago
  • Beyond reskilling Article5 years ago
  • The compensation conundrum Article5 years ago
  • Governing workforce strategies Article5 years ago
  • A memo to HR Article5 years ago
Jeff Schwartz

Jeff Schwartz

Principal

Jeff Schwartz, a principal with Deloitte Consulting LLP, is the US leader for the Future of Work and author of Work Disrupted (Wiley, 2021). Schwartz is an adviser to senior business leaders at global companies, focusing on workforce and business transformation. He is the global editor of the Deloitte’s Global Human Capital Trends report, which he started in 2011.

  • jeffschwartz@deloitte.com
Brad Denny

Brad Denny

Brad Denny, a principal with Deloitte Consulting LLP, leads Deloitte’s US Human Capital practice for the power and utilities industry and coleads the 2019 Global Human Capital Trends report. With almost 25 years of transformation, leadership, talent, and strategy experience, Denny has helped organizations navigate large-scale transformations in the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Japan, and Poland.

  • braddenny@deloitte.com
David Mallon

David Mallon

Managing Director and Chief Analyst | Deloitte US

David Mallon is a managing director at Deloitte Consulting LLP and Chief Analyst and market leader for Deloitte’s Human Capital Research, Eminence, and Market Activation team. With more than 25 years of experience in human capital, he helps clients to sense, analyze, and make higher quality decisions at the ever-shifting intersection of work, workforce, workplace, and industry. Part of Deloitte since 2013, David is the former Head of Research for Bersin and has been part of the team behind Deloitte’s Global Human Capital Trends study for most of its existence. He is a cohost of the Capital H podcast and a sought-after researcher, thought leader, and speaker on organization design and culture, decision making, HR strategy and technology, talent, learning, and performance.

  • dmallon@deloitte.com
  • +1 919 645 6244
Yves Van Durme

Yves Van Durme

Partner

Yves Van Durme is a partner with Deloitte’s Belgian consulting practice and the global leader of Deloitte’s Strategic Change practice. He specializes in leadership and organizational development, as well as talent and HR strategy, in business transformation contexts. Van Durme has more than 20 years of experience as a consultant, project manager, and program developer on human capital projects for multiple European, Japanese, American, and Belgian multinationals; family businesses; and small and mediumsize enterprises.

  • yvandurme@deloitte.com
Maren Hauptmann

Maren Hauptmann

Partner

Maren Hauptmann is the German Human Capital leader and Organization Transformation offering leader. Hauptmann has 21 years of experience in strategy and human capital consulting across multiple industries and has supported German, European, and global companies in large organizational, digital, and cultural transformations.

  • mahauptmann@deloitte.de
Ramona Yan

Ramona Yan

Partner

Ramona Yan is the Human Capital consulting leader for Deloitte China. She has over 20 years’ experience in organizational transformation and HR strategies in advisory and operational roles with leading multinationals and state-owned enterprises in China and Asia, in industries such as financial services, real estate, manufacturing, consumer, retail, education, and pension plans. Yan is a frequent speaker at public conferences on organization transformation and human capital trends and strategies.

  • ramonayan@deloitte.com.cn
Shannon Poynton

Shannon Poynton

Senior Manager | Deloitte Consulting LLP

Shannon is a Senior Manager in Deloitte’s Human Capital practice with experience designing and executing organization, talent, leadership, and change programs that enhance business performance. Shannon advises leaders on strategies to help them retain critical talent, engage their workforce, and reimagine work through innovative combinations of humans and technology. These work, workforce, and workplace programs sit at the intersection of HR and business operations to enable new ways of working, improve customer outcomes, and increase organizational agility. Shannon is a co-author of Deloitte’s Global Human Capital Trends, the largest longitudinal study of HR and talent topics ever conducted, and a frequent speaker on human capital research and workforce trends.

  • shpoynton@deloitte.com
  • +1 267 337 2679

Share article highlights

See something interesting? Simply select text and choose how to share it:

Email a customized link that shows your highlighted text.
Copy a customized link that shows your highlighted text.
Copy your highlighted text.

Designing work for well-being has been saved

Designing work for well-being has been removed

An Article Titled Designing work for well-being already exists in Saved items

Invalid special characters found 
Forgot password

To stay logged in, change your functional cookie settings.

OR

Social login not available on Microsoft Edge browser at this time.

Connect Accounts

Connect your social accounts

This is the first time you have logged in with a social network.

You have previously logged in with a different account. To link your accounts, please re-authenticate.

Log in with an existing social network:

To connect with your existing account, please enter your password:

OR

Log in with an existing site account:

To connect with your existing account, please enter your password:

Forgot password

Subscribe

to receive more business insights, analysis, and perspectives from Deloitte Insights
✓ Link copied to clipboard

Deloitte Insights delivers proprietary research designed to help organizations turn their aspirations into action.

Deloitte Insights

  • Home
  • Topics
  • Industries
  • About Deloitte Insights

Spotlight

  • Weekly Global Economic Outlook
  • Top 10 Reading Guide
  • Celebrating Earth Month
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Resilience
Deloitte logo

Learn about Deloitte’s offerings, people, and culture as a global provider of audit, assurance, consulting, financial advisory, risk advisory, tax, and related services.

  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Privacy Shield
  • Cookies
  • Legal Information for Job Seekers
  • Labor Condition Applications
  • Do Not Sell My Personal Information