When your employees log into work each day, they bring their responsibilities, experiences, and emotions along with them. For working parents, that means they bring their family, their struggles, and their dreams along with them. Your organization's championing a family-friendly culture shows employees that you value their lives in and beyond work—not just as workers.
Investments in family-friendly benefits such as flexible and remote working options, care reimbursement, parental leave, and more can aid retention, recruitment, and brand culture. A survey found that half of U.S. employees indicated that they would prefer enhanced benefits or paid leave over a higher salary or bonus.
What are family-friendly benefits?
Family-friendly benefits support employees through all life stages in integrating and balancing work and family responsibilities. These benefits include tools that support the needs of parents throughout their family journeys, like planning advice, family building reimbursements, mental health support, and access to specialty care. They can also include broader caregiving leave (e.g., caring for a parent, spouse, or domestic partner), as well as parental leave, adoption, paid bereavement leave, and childcare benefits.
Family-friendly benefits are in high demand
As more companies look to foster an equitable, inclusive, and diverse workplace, family-friendly benefits are becoming an increasingly crucial element of their talent strategy. According to a Willis Towers Watson survey, almost six in ten employers (59%) say that family-friendly policies have been essential to their talent strategy over the past three years to a great or very great extent, a figure that is expected to grow to 77% in the next three years. The same report indicated that nearly two-thirds of employers (65%) offer family-friendly benefits because they align with their corporate strategy and mission. A similar percentage provides these benefits to support their company's diversity and inclusion goals and objectives.
While employers have made significant progress on parental leave benefits, there is still work to be done. According to the Modern Family Index, 42% of women still fear starting a family will hurt their career trajectory, and 43% of highly-qualified mothers leave the workforce. On the other hand, despite progress in paternity leave policies, 70% of men take less than 10 days of parental leave.
They're valuable for everyone involved
Good for children
When parents get to spend more time with their children and give them the stimulation and nourishment they need, it leads to positive outcomes. According to a 2020 survey by UNICEF, investing in early childhood development is one of the most effective ways to give children the best start to life while improving their abilities, skills, and productivity. These outcomes are seen beyond the first 90 days of parental leave, extending well into childhood.
Good for women
Family-friendly benefits can help organizations improve gender diversity and illustrate that they value women in the workplace. Affordable child and family care services enable women to participate in employment while caring for their dependents. Access to high-quality gender-responsive childcare and family-friendly early childhood development benefits are crucial to reducing gender imbalances and encouraging greater co-responsibility between women and men.
Good for business
Research suggests that while family-friendly policies pay off in better-educated, healthier children, improved gender equality, and sustainable growth, they're also linked to enhanced workforce productivity. The same UNICEF survey states that companies are beginning to see the value of offering family-friendly benefits that reduce absenteeism, increase employee retention and lower recruitment costs in many countries.
These policies enable working parents, particularly mothers, to advance in their careers, which helps bolster employee engagement and morale while making companies more competitive at attracting, motivating, and retaining employees. Gender-neutral family-friendly policies also increase the probability of women returning to work after maternity leave while encouraging the redistribution of domestic care work and parenting responsibilities. Hence, women are less likely to drop out of the workforce.