Everyone loves a deal, but many Canadians either forget or don't realize they can find discounts through their workplace.
“There really are a lot [of perks] that employees just don’t seem to know about,” said Debby Carreau, CEO and founder of Inspired HR, a human resources consultancy with offices across Canada.
“Those things do become part of a total compensation package when you’re looking holistically at what your total budget is. So if you’re living paycheque to paycheque — as half of Canadians do — those things can really be helpful.”
There are a few reasons why employees might not be fully informed about workplace discounts — your job offer might not have included a detailed breakdown of all your benefits, large and small. Or your onboarding process was an information overload and you’ve forgotten, said Carreau.
It’s even possible your onboarding “just wasn’t very robust,” she added.
On the high end of perks, Carreau pointed to extravagant examples from Silicon Valley — paid sabbaticals for travelling, on-site health care, free meals and dry-cleaning — but more commonplace examples include deep discounts at retailers.
Employees likely expect discounts from their own company and brand, but sometimes brands trade benefits with each other, Carreau said, which boosts staff perks on both sides.
Some employees might have access to savings on gas and groceries, as well as travel deals, such as better rates for car rentals or hotels. Employers might provide staff with free financial planning services, including direct deposits into savings accounts and financial advice, she added.
People who work in certain sectors can sometimes enjoy standardized discounts — just ask at the counter.
“When you’re out shopping, when you’re at the cash register, ask if they have corporate discounts,” Carreau said. “A really common one is a lot of teachers, university professors, health-care workers, all kinds of brands offer discounts, you just have to ask for them. And sometimes they’re as high as 20 per cent.”
According to FlexJobs.com, some “crazy employee benefits” they’ve seen include tickets to local shows, seasonal passes to a nearby ski resort, two hours of housecleaning services per month, and even pet insurance — all free.
More ordinary add-ons from employers include deals for phone plans and gym memberships, said Jennifer Schmidt, partner and innovation leader for Mercer, a global HR consulting firm. But in some of the larger plans she sees, flexible benefits, which allow for more tailored allocations to different benefit categories, can give more choice back to employees.
“In a flexible program, you can get to choose between your health insurance being at a certain level, or a slightly lower level, or maybe you want everything in a health spending account,” Schmidt said.
Mercer research showed younger people want more preventive health-care tools, Schmidt said, such as telemedicine, nutritional counselling, or sleep therapy. Some of these services are already available in employee assistance programs.
When advising employer clients of all sizes, the common wisdom is that such services “enhance their value proposition” for staff, Schmidt said.
“My comment would be that the definition of a benefits program needs to be more expansive, and it needs to include different types of services and support for all of your employees, not just the ones that fit in the box at the moment,” Schmidt said.
“How can your benefits program in aggregate — including perks, including discounts, including access to care, all of those things — work together to really enhance that employee’s experience?”
And it’s not just the biggest companies — Mercer also works to bundle plans for small- to medium-sized employers. So employees at smaller firms should still check their benefits for discounts or services that could be free.
Not sure what’s in your plan? Just ask. If your onboarding was long ago and you forget how to find the materials, check with your HR contact, Carreau said. When she’s advising employers on their plans, she stresses the importance of staff using their plans and perks to the max.
“[We encourage] the employees to fully utilize everything, because there’s a direct correlation to employee engagement, which leads to employee retention,” Carreau said.
“Old school employers will think, 'Don't tell anyone about our benefits, because our premiums will go up.’ The data supports the exact opposite — you want people to use the benefit.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 25, 2024.
Nina Dragicevic, The Canadian Press