Here is Why 2023 Needs Employee Wellness
Larry Mogelonsky, P. Eng.
Advisor to Luxury Hotel Developers and Owners | Recognized as Among World's Top 50 Hotel Educators
Every hotel company has some form of employee health or wellness program in place, but we argue that it won’t be enough as cyclical and secular forces converge this year. While we start by stating these trends to paint a broad picture of the future of hospitality labor, the ironic yet obvious cure is ultimately a further deepening of your organization’s commitment to your employees’ wellbeing.
In the cyclical or near-term over the next 12 months, the hotel industry is still contending with the aftermath of the pandemic, which is acting to both shrink labor supply and spur wage increases, with many of these trends – directly or circuitously – affecting your team’s overall health. These include:
As the travel recovery period normalizes, it’s easy to shrug the cyclical trends off with a ‘this too shall pass’. But the long-term forces are what employee wellness a do-or-die initiative. Notably, these are:
All this is to say that every hotel should expect to bite the bullet by paying their teams more in order to prevent turnover. Individual actors are hardly that rational, though. If you recall Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs, indeed financial security exists at the basal layers of Physiological Needs (ability to pay for food) and Safety Needs (ability to afford a place to live). But beyond meeting the threshold for these two, everyone also then seeks Belonging; in the realm of a corporate culture, this is friendship and family.
And it is this sense of belonging where a sharper focus on employee wellness can work to counteract the forces at play that are leading to inflationary wages. As an example, a team member currently earning $20 per hour but intrinsically doesn’t feel valued will have no problem jumping ship to the competitor next door offering few bucks more per hour. But if that $20 per hour wage is buttressed by staff lunches, periodic team activities and continuing professional development, the case for quitting is hardly as convincing.
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Thus, we see employee wellness – and mental health initiatives – as the best way to improve team retention by developing this sense of belonging through a meaningful non-wage incentive. Especially in the current state of the gig economy, it’s all too easy to leave when you view yourself as a mercenary for hire, but family is life and this is what hotels need to continually address to combat the above mentioned macroeconomic trends.
Just what is wellness?
Perhaps the biggest problem, though, is the ambiguity of the term ‘wellness’ which, by virtue of being all-encompassing, induces a sense of shopper’s paralysis insofar as where hotels should start or what they should focus their limited resources on next. The answer here is never everything, because we must be highly programmatic with each new initiative to ensure it becomes perpetually successful fixture of the corporate culture.
In this, we can leave you with four top choices for what to consider for employee wellness in 2023, with the execution of each dependent on the individual brand or hotel’s unique situation. The commonality throughout is that doing more for your people will halo positively back onto service delivery and your ability to grow revenues for the decade ahead.
Much like how post-pandemic inflation has come to affect the cost of labor on an individual-property level, know that, like wages, wellness is now in an arms race. The best brands around the world are already heavily engaged on this front and they aren’t letting up. Going back to our previous example, if the wellness incentives at both properties are apples-to-apples comparable, it then becomes easier for that $20-per-hour employee to consider the $21-per-hour position across the street.
That means that you cannot treat this topic as a one-and-done activity. You may be able to get ahead of the curve in 2023 but to stay in first place you need a roadmap with quarterly reviews to both benchmark where you stand and continually improve against that index.