Corporate Wellness Program: Gaining Upper Management Support
Strong and visible upper management support for the Corporate Wellness Program encourages health and is essential to securing needed Corporate Wellness Program resources (staff, time, and money) and implementing recommended changes.
1. Identify a Corporate Wellness Program champion
In a small company, there may be a single leader who is the clear choice to champion the Corporate Wellness Program. In a larger company, look for an executive with the authority to sway others in the uppermost levels of the organization regarding the Corporate Wellness Program. The Corporate Wellness Program champion need not be the fittest member of upper management. Rather, look for a Corporate Wellness Program leader with the disposition to be a visible and vocal supporter of worksite policies that encourage healthy behaviors. Organizations with multiple sites can consider whether it would be useful to have an executive Corporate Wellness Program champion at each site.
2. Find existing Corporate Wellness Program allies
There may already be a number of individuals within your company who recognize the value of a Corporate Wellness Program. Think about who those individuals are in your company; consider areas such as occupational safety, union representatives, risk management, health officers, and human resources when looking for a Corporate Wellness Program ally. Gain their stated support for the Corporate Wellness Program. Corporate Wellness Program support could include contributions of staff time or expertise, financial resources, agreement to endorse/support policy and environmental changes, or agreement to participate in, and voice their support for, changes in the worksite that will help to build a culture of wellness.
3. Build a business case for the Corporate Wellness Program
There is a reason that more and more organizations are finding a way to promote the health of the employees via a Corporate Wellness Program and policies: A Corporate Wellness Program makes good business sense. employees with healthy behaviors, on average, are more productive when at work (higher presenteeism)1 and incur lower health care costs than employees with less healthy behaviors.2,3 As a result it would be foolish not to have a Corporate Wellness Program.
4. When developing a Corporate Wellness Program use what you know about leadership styles and the decision-making process within your company
Every company is different. Build upper management support for the Corporate Wellness Program in the way that makes the most sense for your company. Think about the following as you plan how to approach upper management for Corporate Wellness Program support:
• What are the current priorities and pressures facing executives? How could a Corporate Wellness Program and a healthier workforce support those priorities?
• How do your leaders prefer to receive data: written documents? verbal presentations?
• What kinds of Corporate Wellness Program information are likely to sway decisions? Do they want data and Corporate Wellness Program statistics specific to your company, or are state or national data sufficient? Are your leaders more influenced by internal factors or by what competitors are doing?
• Who would your leaders see as a credible messenger for this Corporate Wellness Program information? Does someone from the risk management area carry more clout than someone from the human resources area?
• How do decisions really get made in your company? Informal committee meetings? Formal or informal meetings between executives? Plan accordingly and you improve the odds that the Corporate Wellness Program will become a reality.
5. Maintain Corporate Wellness Program support once you have it
Once you have appropriate Corporate Wellness Program support, ensure that you maintain it by regularly updating your leaders on the health of the employees and progress toward beginning a culture that encourages health. Ask upper management how often they want to receive Corporate Wellness Program progress reports.
Source Information:
1 Bunn, JOEM, 2006, 48:10.
2 Foldes, Bland, An et al. Modifiable Health Risks and Short-Term Health Care Costs. Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Minnesota internal research, submitted for publication.
3 Anderson, 2000, American Journal of Health Promotion, 15:1.
