Employee experience
How to Encourage Employees to Get (& Stay) Fit
Jeff Selander
Jeff Selander, Author at Glassdoor US | Jan 6, 2016
Breaking new ground in employee health and wellness requires looking beyond the status quo, and being willing to take a few risks.
That insight, and where it led us, is one of the chief reasons Glassdoor selected my company, Health Catalyst, one of their Best Places to Work in 2016. Sure, we offer unlimited time off, great compensation, a mission-driven and highly successful business situated in one of the great cities for outdoors enjoyment, Salt Lake City. But one of the most popular elements of our benefits package is something that nearly every company of our size offers – our wellness program.
Over the last two years, we’ve used the program not only to improve the health of team members, but to encourage teamwork, fun and healthy rewards. Yet our first foray into employee wellness didn’t go so well.
In 2013, with little experience in fostering employee health, we turned to the wellness program offered by our insurance broker. It had everything that common wisdom told us a wellness program needed. Yet it wasn’t the least bit engaging and, not surprisingly, for the most part our employees weren’t using it.
[Related: Employers, here are the benefits employees want most]
Confronted by the failure of our broker’s wellness program, in 2013 we decided to develop our own. We figured if an award-winning healthcare technology company with hundreds of years of cumulative clinical experience on board can’t build a better wellness program, who can?
Wellness = better health habits
Our search for better wellness strategies came out of our belief that a successful work environment, where team members can grow and perform to their full potential, depends closely on their overall health and well-being. And there is no better determinant of both overall health and a feeling of well-being than an individual’s daily health routines.
Get Fit Stay Fit: a program for team members, their families, and friends
With a strong conviction that we could do better, we began developing our new wellness program by asking two questions. What behaviors have the most significant impact on health? And what would encourage team members to engage in a wellness program?
We came up with the following four answers:
- Eating well and getting enough sleep
- Motivation (similar activities, team dynamics/gamification)
- Practicing mindfulness or meditation
- Being physically active
Jeff Selander



