The Watercooler: How making wellbeing a priority can halt ‘The Great Resignation’

The Watercooler - the great resignation - evening-standard

The pandemic put a whole new range of words into circulation — from lockdown to WFH. By mid-2021, this list of terms included “The Great Resignation”. Furlough made many rethink their careers, with workers quitting in their droves. At the start of this year, over half of employees under the age of 34 were resigning or looking for new roles.

It means employers are obliged to rethink what they’re offering, and one area identified for improvement is employee health and wellbeing. Work-life balance, attitudes to menopause, financial health and more all matter when it comes to making a holistic impact in this area.

Across the country, businesses are waking up to this. At JP Morgan, they’ve added cover for fertility treatment to their benefits package, at boutique bank Hambro they’ve added an extra month of paid holiday, while there is talk of installing a “chief happiness officer” at legal firm Clifford Chance.

While some of these policies seem meatier than others, they provide plenty of food for thought. But what does wellness look like for workers at the businesses that sell it? Gympass is a corporate wellbeing platform app through which the employees of hundreds of companies can book gym classes, or choose from a shelf of wellbeing apps addressing everything from financial fitness to IBS support.

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This article was written by Libby Galvin on behalf of The Watercooler for the Evening Standard.