New research by Xerox Human Resources Services in conjunction with the National Business Group on Health® demonstrates employers' willingness to invest in emerging technologies aimed at improving employee wellbeing despite challenges measuring impact and return on investment. The biannual study, 'Emerging Technology to Promote Employee Wellbeing,' examines the current use and future potential of four key technologies: gamification, mobile technologies, wearable sensors and social media.

Mobile use is the highest priority, as over half of responding employers are using apps and associated technologies to provide their employees a consumer experience that matches the tablet and smartphone lifestyle. Mobile is also the largest growth area since the 2013 findings, which saw a 16 percent mobile usage. Gamification, social networking and wearable sensors all reported similar usage of about one-third of responding employers.

The use of wearable sensors, a technology not studied in the 2013 survey, allows for the most direct feedback to employees on their wellbeing as well as providing employers with aggregate data on the impact of this technology on employee engagement in health. Reflecting the need for results driven data, activity tracking is now used by 37 percent of respondents with another 37 percent planning to adopt the technology in the coming years.

'Measuring the impact of technology-supported wellness programs remains challenging for employers, particularly where direct cause and effect cannot be quantified,' said Scot Marcotte, client technology leader, Xerox HR Services. 'Wearable sensors offer an opportunity for better measurement, but adoption of work-sponsored wearable usage has been slow due to a variety of reasons, including cost of the technology and privacy concerns.'

By far the greatest barrier preventing organizations from using these new technologies is competition from higher-priority issues in their budgets. Concerns over confidentiality and privacy issues were also identified by more than 30 percent of respondents as barriers across all categories - particularly for social media.

'Changes in benefit program design increasingly require individuals to take personal responsibility for their wellbeing,' said Karen Marlo, vice president of the National Business Group on Health. 'New technology, such as wearables, provides employers with an opportunity to motivate and empower employees to take an active role in their own healthcare experience. The key for employers is identifying programs that provide both individualized support and measurable results for employee wellbeing, working to positively impact health and wealth.'

This research was presented today at the National Business Group on Health's Business Health Agenda conference 2016 in Washington, D.C.

More than 210 employers participated in the survey, conducted by Buck Consultants at Xerox HR Services and the National Business Group on Health in the fall of 2015. More than 70 percent of the respondents were multinational organizations. The median employer size was 10,000 to 24,999 employees; 17 percent had a workforce in excess of 100,000.

Xerox HR Services helps employers improve their HR programs through advisory, technology, and administrative services while enabling employees to better manage their health and wealth programs as well as their career development.

About Xerox
Xerox is helping change the way the world works. By applying our expertise in imaging, business process, analytics, automation and user-centric insights, we engineer the flow of work to provide greater productivity, efficiency and personalization. We conduct business in 180 countries, and our more than 140,000 employees create meaningful innovations and provide business process services, printing equipment, software and solutions that make a real difference for our clients - and their customers.

About NBGH
The National Business Group on Health is the nation's only non-profit organization devoted exclusively to representing large employers' perspective on national health policy issues and helping companies optimize business performance through health improvement, innovation and health care management. The Business Group leads initiatives to address the most relevant health care issues facing employers today and enables human resource and benefit leaders to learn, share and leverage best practices from the most progressive companies. Business Group members, which include 71 Fortune 100 companies, provide health coverage for more than 50 million U.S. workers, retirees and their families. For more information, visit www.businessgrouphealth.org.

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Xerox Corporation issued this content on 03 March 2016 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 03 March 2016 15:38:27 UTC

Original Document: http://rss.xerox.com/~r/xerox-news/~3/fnMaRt70lts/Xerox-HRS-Survey-on-Technology-for-Employee-Wellbeing