Not all perks are created equal

It turns out that the most talked about perks – from unlimited vacation to company-paid ski trips – are not the most effective. What should HR focus on to attract and retain the right people?

The most extravagant perks may start the most conversations, but are they really the most effective? One academic says organisations don’t need to go to extremes to get the best perks.

Netflix offers unlimited vacation, while Justin.TV gives employees a $300 liquor stipend. However, Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania professor Peter Cappelli said these top-end perks do not contribute to productivity. 

“It’s like fancy artwork in the exec suite,” he said, adding that once a company starts offering an excessive perk it can be difficult to reduce it. “People certainly do get used to whatever perks they have, but they get used to everything they’ve got. The phrase ‘culture of entitlement’ is another way of pointing out the obvious that we take things for granted.”

Cappelli said that underneath all this extravagance, company perks were implemented to achieve three simple goals: tax-free compensation, access to discounted group health care benefits and increased company morale. Anything beyond that is excess.

What should HR do instead? Simple. Pay employees more.

“Many employees would prefer that anyway,” Cappelli said.

His advice matches a Clarius study from earlier this year which showed that 80% of employees consider money the most important factor in deciding whether or not to stay in their job or move to a new role.

Would your employees perfer workplace perks or higher pay?

Recent articles & video

Hong Kong's unemployment rate steady at 3%

Almost 40 top firms in Malaysia fail to meet 30% women board participation target: reports

Employers urged to go further than DEI policies in promoting inclusion at work

More than half of workers worldwide have not received safety training: report

Most Read Articles

Balancing data privacy and employee monitoring in Hong Kong: Legal insights

Executive's downfall: CEO sends explicit and vulgar content to co-workers via work email

LinkedIn pauses collection of users' private data for training GenAI models