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Coverage concerns
To:Brew Readers
HR Brew // Morning Brew // Update
HR leaders hesitant to add GLP-1 coverage.

Hey, friends! We’ve made it through Thanksgiving, Black Friday, Small Business Saturday, Cyber Monday, and Giving Tuesday. We’ve arrived at back-to-work Wednesday, when bank accounts look as empty as the Big Box stores after this weekend. Though you would benefit from some solid heads-down work today, your body is screaming that a comfy sweater and warm cup of coffee is more your speed. Keep it up!

In today’s edition:

🩺 Cost vs. benefit

Coworking

Don’t know what you got ‘til it’s gone

—Courtney Vinopal, Adam DeRose, Brianna Monsanto

TOTAL REWARDS

Semaglutide injection pen or cartridge pen for diabetics and weight loss in female hand. Medical equipment for diabetes patients

Iuliia Burmistrova/Getty Images

Concerns about the rising cost of healthcare seem to be everywhere these days, from the corridors of Capitol Hill to CEOs’ corner offices.

HR leaders are particularly attuned to how this trend is affecting their workforces and overall benefits strategy. Recent surveys show employers expect health costs to rise by upwards of 9% next year, with many respondents pointing to GLP-1 drugs for weight loss as a top culprit. These medications carry a high list price—around $1,000 a month—but hold promise for effectively treating conditions ranging from obesity to heart disease.

A recent poll conducted among clients of the consulting firm Mercer shows organizations are holding off on plans to cover GLP-1s for weight loss in the future, if they aren’t already doing so.

For more on HR leaders’ hesitancy to expand GLP-1 coverage, keep reading here.—CV

Presented By Culture Amp

HR STRATEGY

A portrait of director of cultural insights at Reward Gateway, Alexandra Powell

Alexandra Powell

As the director of cultural insights for employee engagement platform Reward Gateway | Edenred, Alexandra Powell understands how data can tell stories. She works with her company and its clients to understand insights revealed in the data and implement practices that can improve employee experience.

But for Powell, the data and the stories are only part of the work. Leaders and managers need help seeing and understanding how their behaviors to their direct reports can impact business outcomes, and she’s passionate about showing them how.

“How do we make that data real for you? How do we translate what is a theory into a practice that will actually cause people to sign up and want more and more and more, and so that’s that combination,” she said.

For more from our conversation with Powell, keep reading here.—AD

Together With Strategic Education

RECRUITMENT & RETENTION

An illustration of a tech CEO cutting an employee's computer in half

Hannah Minn

You never know what you’ve got until it’s gone…especially when it’s an employee who holds all the niche knowledge needed to work the outdated technology that keeps your organization afloat.

The software industry has a big generational turnover problem on its hands, according to Billy Hollis, partner at Nashville, Tennessee-based consulting firm Next Version Systems. During a Nov. 19 panel at Live! 360 Tech Con in Orlando, Hollis said many executives don’t realize the importance of employees with institutional knowledge.

“You can hire and acquire other people in but, man, they’re going to make mistakes,” Hollis said. “There’s stuff that they don’t know, and if you have enough of that, you will make enough customers mad that it seriously risks your business.”

Greg Rivera, VP of product at CAST, recalled experiencing this dilemma firsthand when he worked at a global mailing-technology company.

For more on the software industry’s generational turnover problem, keep reading on IT Brew.—BM

Together With EasyLlama

WORK PERKS

A desktop computer plugged into a green couch.

Francis Scialabba

Today’s top HR reads.

Stat: Newell Brands, of Yankee Candles and Sharpies fame, becomes the newest corporation to announce it will cut 10% of its workforce, and close roughly 20 of its candle stores to “enhance efficiency” for next year. (the Wall Street Journal)

Quote: “The biggest thing is that employers just need to know what they’re getting themselves into. You have to know what your system is doing and do proactive compliance.”—Alexander Reich, employment attorney at Saul Ewing, on the record keeping, vetting, and auditing of AI vendor tools that’s needed to guard against employee discrimination (the Washington Post)

Read: In a little case of “do as I say, not as I do,” SHRM, in court documents filed ahead of its discrimination lawsuit which began this week, asked a judge to exclude evidence of its expertise in HR processes. (Business Insider)

2025 reflections: Join experts from Culture Amp, BambooHR, and LifeLabs Learning for a discussion about what went down this year in HR—the predictions that materialized, the ones that didn’t, and what the outcomes reveal. Register here.*

*A message from our sponsor.

Kate People Person Podcast

Amelia Kinsinger

HR Brew’s new show People Person is here to help you through the biggest challenges in the people ops industry, from managing open enrollment to crafting a great workplace culture. Tune in now, wherever you get your podcasts.

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