Most employee benefits packages get built once and left alone. Your workforce changes, life stages shift, and cost pressures evolve. But does your benefits package keep up? If not, the gap has a real cost: disengaged employees, wasted spend, and a reward strategy that quietly loses its edge.
Building inclusive employee benefits that genuinely work for a diverse workforce is harder than it looks. We explored this topic in a webinar with our parent company Ciphr. Led by Phil Curtis and Niall Munro from the FlexGenius team, the session brought together the strategic thinking and practical guidance HR leaders need to design a platform that works for every employee, regardless of their age, life stage, or circumstances. Here are the key insights.
When a benefits package no longer reflects what your people need, you end up with what's often called the 'benefits gap'. Employees disengage, stop using what's available, and the budget you've allocated goes to waste.
The problem compounds. Poor benefits visibility weakens your employer brand, making it harder to attract and retain the people you want. A rigid reward structure also signals to employees, particularly younger ones, that the organisation isn't paying attention to what matters to them.
"If we don't do anything, there's a real cost to it. Employees get disengaged, they stop interacting with the benefits and the platforms, they don't understand what's on offer, and that costs us money. It's waste." - Phil
The answer is not more benefits. It is better choices, grounded in a clear understanding of what a multigenerational workforce needs.
Inclusive employee wellbeing benefits must address physical, mental, and financial wellbeing, not in isolation, but as a joined-up offer.
Employee assistance programmes (EAPs) have come a long way. What was once a reactive phone line is now a broader source of support, giving employees access to practical guidance, counselling, and wellbeing resources when they need them. For employers, the value lies in making that support easy to find, easy to use, and visible as part of a wider wellbeing strategy.
"Burnout prevention, preventative care, presenteeism – these are words that have properly entered the vocabulary now. They're all being considered carefully by employers." - Phil
The key distinction for HR leaders is the shift from reactive to preventative. A good mental health benefit doesn't just offer support when employees hit a wall. It helps prevent that happening in the first place.
Read more: Employee wellbeing strategy: a practical guide for HR teams
NHS waiting times continue to drive demand for private health benefits (British Insurance News). Private medical insurance (PMI) remains highly valued, but premiums are rising and many employers are reviewing excesses to manage costs. Health cash plans are increasingly popular as a complement to PMI because they fill a day-to-day healthcare gap and make medical support accessible at every pay grade.
Digital health tools are also becoming standard. Virtual GP access, available around the clock, removes the friction of getting appointments. Newer phone-based technologies can assess physical health indicators remotely, which is a meaningful development for employees who work flexibly or away from a fixed location.
"NHS waiting times are driving demand for medical insurance, and we're seeing the emergence of more digital healthcare too, with virtual GP access certainly increasing." - Niall
Financial stress is one of the biggest drivers of lost productivity and poor engagement. Inclusive employee benefits address both the immediate and the longer-term impact.
Retail discount schemes give employees real, everyday savings on groceries, travel, and day-to-day spending, accessible instantly via smartphone. Earned wage access tools let employees draw down on pay they've already earned before payday, providing a meaningful safety net for unexpected costs. And for longer-term planning, employers can offer up to £500 per year per employee for retirement and financial planning advice via salary sacrifice, delivering a tax saving for the individual.
"There's an opportunity for salary sacrifice for financial advice, £500 a year. It's been little used, to be honest, but we're seeing more schemes built around it. A saving of 32 or 42% on that is quite attractive." - Phil
True inclusion means recognising that employees' lives outside work shape what they value within it. Benefits for a diverse workforce can't follow a single template. Personalised employee benefits make a real difference when they support people through the moments that matter.
Giving employees the option to buy up to five additional days of holiday per year, via pre-tax salary deductions, is consistently well-received. It's also commercially sound. Organisations that introduce holiday trading find that employees manage their workloads around it without any drop in productivity. The employer saves on salary costs and National Insurance Contributions (NICs) on the traded days.
"It saves businesses money too, on the assumption you're not replacing the resource for the extra holiday. You save the tax and NI on the salary for that traded day, and it suits everybody." - Phil
As childcare voucher schemes phase out, forward-thinking employers are exploring workplace nurseries and structured salary sacrifice arrangements to ease the financial pressure on parents.
Elder care is growing in importance too. By 2065, 26% of the population is projected to be aged 65 or over, and 46% aged 50 or over (Caring for Ageing Better, 2025). With an ageing population, access to vetted care home information and emergency family support is becoming a meaningful inclusion measure for employees managing caregiving responsibilities alongside full-time work.
With many of these caring responsibilities often falling to women, addressing the barriers and putting supportive benefits in place can help women stay with your organisation. Research from across the Ciphr group found that one in nine people believe they have faced unfair treatment and discrimination at work, or when job hunting, because of their parenting and/or caring responsibilities. A proactive approach to inclusive employee benefits can go a long way to addressing this.
Cycle to work schemes remain popular, with over 35,500 cycle to work certificates issued by Cycle to Work Alliance members during Q4 2025 (Cycling Industry News, 2026). And electric vehicle (EV) leasing continues to gain traction, with the two millionth battery EV registered in the UK in April 2026 (WeBuyAnyCar, 2026). EV salary sacrifice delivers significant tax savings for employees and meaningful NI savings for employers. Most modern fleet providers now manage early leaver risk, which previously put many organisations off.
Reward and recognition are also evolving. Employees increasingly want to use reward points for rewards that reflect their values, such as extra leave or time to volunteer with local charities, instead of purely commercial vouchers.
Organisations often hit two common pitfalls when they shift to a more flexible, inclusive approach.
"The most common mistake moving to flex is trying to do too much too quickly. You frighten the employees." - Phil
Launching with an overwhelming number of employee benefits creates choice paralysis for employees and high workloads for the HR teams managing them. The instinct to showcase everything on day one usually backfires. A focused, high-value set of benefits will always beat a long list that tries to do everything.
A benefits platform that only feels relevant once a year will be ignored for the other eleven months. Sustained engagement depends on a rhythm of communications and touchpoints that keep the offer visible.
Before you select a platform, establish the framework your benefits programme will require. The goal is inclusive employee benefits that are easy to run and even easier for employees to use.
Benefit selection rules need to be manageable and not add significant manual workload for HR and payroll teams. If the admin burden of running the platform is high, adoption suffers.
Financial benefits, in particular, can be dense with terminology. Make sure that all employees, not just those who are confident with their finances, can understand what's available.
Short, targeted surveys give your workforce a voice in what gets included.
"A really good, well-curated selection of benefits that deliver real value is much better than a smorgasbord of everything." - Phil
If you're moving to a new platform, launch with your existing core benefits before you introduce new ones. Familiarity reduces initial friction. After six months, introduce salary sacrifice schemes, then layer in lifestyle-oriented benefits gradually.
Flexible benefits only work when employees see the options that matter to them. That is where targeted communications come in: they help you cut through the noise and point people towards relevant support at the right time.
"Where clients use our comms tools, sign-in rates are considerably higher than where there's no direct link to the system. Focused, targeted messages by age or job role – that's how you get engagement." - Niall
For example, automated, targeted messaging directing elder care information to relevant employee groups or retirement planning content to senior staff is significantly more effective than company-wide broadcasts. It signals that the organisation understands its people.
Want to see how FlexGenius could work for your organisation? Our specialists can show you exactly what's possible.
Analytics can tell you precisely which benefits are being used, and which aren't. That insight lets you benchmark performance, remove under-used benefits, and reallocate budget to initiatives that will make more of an impact.
Key metrics to track include:
FlexGenius is built to make all this easy. From setup to launch and beyond, we give HR teams the platform and the support to build a benefits programme that gets used.
If you missed the live session, you can watch the full replay below.
Flexible benefits and inclusion: how to build a package that works for everyone