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- Business and/or life coaching
- the employer offers support from a trained mentor,
normally based outside the firm, either over the phone or
face-to-face. The employee has regular sessions with their
coach who advises on issues relating to business and personal
goals.
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- Childcare vouchers - these vouchers,
given, sold by employers to parents at a reduced cost or substituted
for a part of salary, enable working parents to save money
on childcare. As such, they are a good way of encouraging
staff retention, particularly among women returning from maternity
leave. The Government does not expect employers to pay National
Insurance on the vouchers thus enabling them to pass the 10%
saving on to their employees. Parents can buy each £10
voucher for £9 and can then spend the vouchers on any
form of legal childcare, including childminders, nurseries,
nannies, family relatives and out-of-school schemes for the
over 5’s.
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- Company fitness centre - this is
a gym or health club either owned by or outsourced by a company
for use by employees. The gym is usually based on-site.
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- Concierge services / Lifestyle
management services - the employer buys in
the services of a company that assists employees in managing
their busy home lives by doing time-consuming tasks for them.
Tasks can range from dog walking to sourcing emergency childcare
or organising a wedding. The cost varies according to the
level of service; at the highest level, concierge companies
will find you a private jet for hire within 24 hours.
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- Employee assistance programmes -
these organisations offer a mix of counselling, concierge
services and information on everything from finding schools
to help with bereavement. Employers pay a subscription so
that employees can phone for help at any time of the day or
night. Employee assistance programmes also help businesses
understand what their employees’ key stressors are so
that they can address the root causes.
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- Flexible benefits
- employees are offered a raft of benefits from which
they can choose those that suit their circumstances and are
appropriate to their life stage. This may mean that an employee
can buy more holiday days, increase their healthcare benefits,
or buy leisure or retail vouchers at a reduced rate. Employees
decide which benefits they want on an annual basis and those
benefits then remain in force for a year.
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- Improved maternity provisions - provisions
provided by the employer that are in excess of the statutory
minimum. Examples include higher pay whilst on maternity leave
or offering a ‘returnee’s bonus’.
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- In-house occupational health provisions
- the provision of work-related health facilities enabling
employees to have medicals (either prior to recruitment or
on request), health checks and get advice on health issues.
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- On-site childcare facilities / On-site crèche
- the employer has a nursery or crèche at the
place of employment for staff with children. Such facilities
reduce time travelling to and from work, since parents don’t
have to drop off and pick up their children elsewhere, and
employees can visit their children at lunchtimes. Crèches
and nurseries save time and reduce anxiety in case of illness
or emergencies.
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- Mentoring - the employer provides
personal coaching from a trained mentor, who is either an
employee or from an outside firm, to support the employee
with career-related issues.
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- Private healthcare benefits - the
employer buys in healthcare services from a private healthcare
firm, to enable employees to receive free healthcare benefits,
or benefits at a reduced cost.
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- Subsidised healthcare or complementary therapies
- the employer offers therapies, such as massage or
osteopathy, at a reduced cost to employees. The therapist
usually visits the workplace once or twice a week.
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