article thumbnail

“Why you should eat a healthy diet.” With Dr. William Seeds & Meredith Oppenheim

Thrive Global

After graduating from the Harvard Business School in 2001, I worked in the senior housing industry for nearly 20 years including for the largest owners and operators and a range of consulting clients including companies, governments and families. Can you share the most interesting story that happened to you since you started your career?

article thumbnail

Employers’ Cost to Provide Employee Benefits Has Risen 24% Since 2001, New Analysis Finds

HR Daily Advisor

employers’ cost to provide employee benefits, measured as a percentage of pay, increased 24% between 2001 and 2015, fueled largely by a doubling in healthcare benefit costs, according to a new analysis by Willis Towers Watson, a leading global advisory, broking, and solutions company. of pay in 2001 to 18.3%

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Study: Employers’ Cost to Provide Employee Benefits Has Risen 24% Since 2001

HR Daily Advisor

employers’ cost to provide employee benefits, measured as a percentage of pay, increased 24% between 2001 and 2015, fueled largely by a doubling in healthcare benefit costs, according to a new analysis by Willis Towers Watson (WTW). of pay in 2001 to 18.3% kutubQ / iStock / Getty Images Plus. of pay in 2015, a jump of 24%.

article thumbnail

Special Report from CareerBuilder—Changes in Workforce Composition, 2001–2014

HR Daily Advisor

Major demographic shifts in the United States since 2001 have led to a workforce that looks quite different today, according to a new report from CareerBuilder. In 2014, 49% of jobs were held by women, compared to 48% in 2001. million more female workers since 2001 compared to just 2.2 Occupation Composition by Gender.

Report 40
article thumbnail

How to coach yourself through investing in a bear market

Guideline

However, saving for retirement is different from saving for other goals because you are not significantly impacted by periods of volatility. Saving for retirement is usually a long term investment goal, so you can afford to take a bit more risk—short-term volatility isn’t going to matter if your retirement is 30 to 40 years out.

article thumbnail

The Latest BLS Data Means that Talent Remains a Critical Imperative (i4cp login required)

i4cp

There are many factors for this, including demographics (an aging workforce), low rates of workforce participation (variously caused by early retirements, increased disability leave, long periods of stimulus payments, etc.), As shown below, that quit rate remains far above any month from 2001-2021. in March of this year.

Data 105
article thumbnail

A Recognition Moment: An Interview with Jacqueline Scafidi of Zurich

Achievers

On September 11, 2001, Zurich North America lost four colleagues in the World Trade Center attacks: John Keohane, Peggy Alario, Kathy Moran and Lud Picarro. They’ve recently had the opportunity to listen to their employees in a more in-depth way and map out key moments that matter to their experiences from when they join to when they retire.