In July 2013 Prudential Group Insurance partnered with market research firm Greenwald & Associates to survey more than 600 larger employers that offered either short- or long-term disability benefits, or both. The companies ranged in size from 100 to over 10,000 employees. The goal was to gain a greater understanding of how employers are approaching employee disability challenges with:
- Benefit solutions;
- Partners and services;
- The type of disability benefits employers currently offer their employees;
- The types of vendors they use; and
- What services affect their carrier selection decisions.
The result was a better view of the carrier selection criteria larger employers have adopted.
Buying Behavior
The survey identified several distinct clusters among respondents based on their criteria for selecting a disability carrier. The three most significant clusters, which Prudential labels as "Already Theres," "Aspirers" and "Laissez-Faires," differ considerably from each other as the following highlights illustrate.
| Cluster | Key Features |
| Already Theres |
|
| Aspirers |
|
| Laissez-Faires |
|
Business Opportunities
Many employers know that a robust benefits package can help attract and retain valued employees, which is critical for managing productivity and maximizing human capital. At the same time, though, companies must control benefit costs. Recognizing a company's cluster profile can provide insight into its goals and likely buying behavior and add value to a consultative relationship. Additionally, the information can indicate possible approaches to meet both the benefits-quality and cost-control goals that companies attempt to balance.
The survey results highlighted that employers often experience a gap between their absence management and RTW goals and their actual capabilities in those areas. Producers and consultants can help groups close those gaps.
Absence Management
Prudential defines "total absence management" as a comprehensive, integrated approach that incorporates formal absence management and RTW programs, streamlined reporting and administration of absences and claims, and compliance documentation. The practice of total absence management is twice as common with larger employers compared to small business. Larger companies' goals in this area are also more aggressive.
While employers of all sizes express some degree of need for absence management, the survey found a large divide between small and large employers. Small employers are not planning on adding many of the services available for total absence management. Large employers, by contrast, show a greater percentage of those who have implemented these services, plan to add these services and find these services critical in carrier selection.
Overall, fully half of organizations (55 percent) with disability benefits rate their level of total absence management as 4 or below on a scale of 0 to 10. On average, the largest companies (10,000+) are more advanced (they rate themselves 5.7 out of 10) versus the smallest companies (4.0 out of 10). This area offers substantial opportunity for advice and consultation since half of companies have a goal of improving their absence management programs within three to five years, with one-quarter seeking significant change.
© Arc, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to TMSalesOperations@arc-network.com. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.