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Brain Circuits

Why your well-being initiatives aren’t working – and how to fix them 

Published May 23, 2025 in Brain Circuits • 3 min read

It takes more than a few yoga classes to tackle the problems of burnout, financial stress, and poor mental and physical health. Consult the checklist to gauge the effectiveness of your current approach to well-being and check out the three characteristics of strategies that work.

Checklist: What does our current strategy look like?

1. Does our approach to well-being align directly with the organization’s purpose, business objectives, and people strategy?

2. Are we using an evidence-driven approach to measure employee well-being?

3. Do we know how improved individual well-being links to better organizational outcomes?

Why initiatives fail

Many organizations rely on superficial well-being initiatives, such as yoga classes, well-being apps, and one-off events. These fail to tackle the root causes of ‘ill-being’: systemic challenges including job design, organizational culture, and leadership behaviors.

Three characteristics of effective programs

1. Strategic approach

  • Link well-being to business objectives
    • Define how well-being contributes to key outcomes such as productivity, retention, and customer satisfaction.
  • Tailor initiatives to the needs of the workforce
    • Use employee data (e.g., health assessments, surveys, and focus groups) to segment your workforce and address specific challenges.
  • Join up the well-being, DE&I, and talent strategies
    • Use the well-being strategy to support and enable other aspects of the people strategy.

2. Systemic approach

Being systemic means viewing well-being programs as a whole, recognizing that actions in one area will affect other parts of the system. The key pillars are:

  • Mental health
    • Access to therapy at work, resilience training, and awareness campaigns to destigmatize mental health conversations can help people develop the tools to manage their mental health.
  • Physical health
    • Health screenings, private GP access, and exercise programs to encourage healthier lifestyles can help avoid or delay the onset of chronic conditions and reduce the costs of absenteeism.
  • Financial well-being
    • This can take the form of education on budgeting, debt management, pensions, and crisis-support funds.
  • Social well-being
    • Social connections and other qualitative factors significantly impact well-being. Building belonging is particularly important in hybrid or remote environments.

3. Evidence-driven

Practical actions for an evidence-driven approach:

  • Start with the business issue
    • Ask yourself what issues – such as reduced productivity, increased health claims, or higher absence – you are seeing.
  • Gather robust data across
    • To understand what issues are presenting, who is affected, and the impact on the business, use multiple sources to identify the interventions most likely to lead to improvements.
  • Set clear metrics
    • Define success measures for your well-being initiatives, such as reduced absenteeism or improved employee engagement scores.
  • Challenge vendors to justify the effectiveness of their offerings
    • Avoid solutions without a clear evidence base. Interventions may not deliver measurable impact unless linked to broader systemic change.

Key learning

Adopt a more strategic, systemic, and evidence-driven approach to sustain well-being, unlocking tangible benefits such as improved productivity, talent retention, and organizational performance.

Authors

Dr. Wolfgang Seidl

Partner and Workplace Health Consulting Leader, Mercer

Wolfgang is a Partner at Mercer and leads Global Mental Health Consulting, advising companies on health and wellbeing strategy and proactive interventions, such as resilience programs. He is a member of the Global Workforce Health Management Leadership Team, founded the International Health and Wellbeing Network, and currently advises a number of global and national organizations on data-driven strategy and implementation.

Wolfgang is a Doctor of Medicine, holds a master’s degree in psychiatry, philosophy and society, and is a BACP-accredited Counsellor and Psychotherapist. He is an internationally recognized expert in the field of quality enhancement measures in workplace health and return on investment models. He serves on a number of advisory boards and is a visiting university professor in applied psychology

Gillian Pillans

Research Director, Corporate Research Forum

Gillian has worked as a senior HR practitioner and OD specialist for several organizations including Swiss Re, Vodafone, and BAA. Prior to her HR career, she was a management consultant with Deloitte Consulting and is also a qualified solicitor. As Research Director, Gillian has written various CRF reports on subjects including HR strategy, organization design and development, leadership development, talent management, coaching, and diversity.

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