August 6, 2024
August 6, 2024
Photo by Andrew Neel on Unsplash
A helpful takeaway for HR pros and hiring managers: Advertising employer-sponsored benefits in a strategic way can help an employer stand out from the crowd, per Hiring Lab.
“In a tight labor market, adding benefits to job postings in lower-wage sectors — where they aren’t often given and where job seekers may be less likely to assume they’re offered — could go a long way in attracting applicants,” Shrivastava pointed out.
Likewise, employers offering limited remote work opportunities may view some benefits as an important recruiting tool amid still-intense competition to attract candidates, Shrivastava said.
However, this same strategy may be less important in the tech and other professional and knowledge industries, where remote work is more common and where job seekers may expect benefits to be offered.
“In other words, benefits may be more commonly included as part of a negotiated compensation package in some sectors, and a low share of postings with benefits explicitly offered in these sectors probably does not mean benefits aren’t offered at all,” Shrivastava noted.
There was one notable exception, however: in May, 12% of postings for software development jobs advertised at least one family benefit, the highest of any sector analyzed, Shrivastava wrote.
Others may soon follow suit. In a survey by Business Group on Health and Fidelity Investments, more than half of the 160 employer respondents said they plan to address the impact of social determinants of health — social and economic conditions that affect a person’s ability to be healthy — on personal well-being in the next few years, according to findings released in May.
Some employers said they’re tackling the social determinants of work — factors affecting how an employee can show up for work in a healthy way — such as by providing caregiving or child care benefits. More than three-quarters reported providing family-forming and reproductive support this year.
Nationwide, pay transparency has also increased, and a lack of pay information in a job posting can be a deal-breaker for many job seekers. More than 2 in 5 of U.S. workers who responded to a Robert Half survey said they’d lose interest in a position if the job ad lacked a salary range in the job description, June results showed.
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