Social media and intranet case studies, best practices, & evolution by Toby Ward.
View Article  Intranet case study: Baxter International benefits portal

(Employee Benefits Conference, Conference Board – New York City, NY) Baxter is a very big health sciences company with 50,000 employees in 120 locations in 110 countries. Known for medical devices, pharmaceuticals, and biotechnology, Baxter has 67 manufacturing facilities.

 

Baxter does not have staff consultants for employee benefits. Benefits have been outsourced since the 1990s. At the heart of their benefits strategy is MyBenefitsAtBaxter.com – the employee benefits portal. This is available on the public Internet for anyone to see (though the key areas are of course password protected).

 

 

MyBenefitsAtBaxter.com features:

 

  • Personalized health and welfare personalization tools
  • Online health and welfare enrollment (U.S.)
  • New hires
  • Current employees with life changes
  • Annual enrollment
  • Online access and search of benefits information including summary plan descriptions
  • Online access to pension estimates and commencements

MyBenefits replaced the former voice recognition system (VRU) which accrued savings of between US$300,000–$350,000. The online system has replaced any print materials that existed formerly. Now employees have the option of printing from the benefits portal.

 

The portal itself was rolled-out over a four-phase period spanning seven months and is outsourced to EDS using their Authoria product.

 

Challenges to implementing the benefits portal:

  • Resistance from HR and employees to move from high touch, hand holding
  • Employees speak many languages (many do not speak or read English)
  • Many employees have limited computer skills
  • Some employees have limited access to computers

 To overcome thee challenges the portal team developed and implemented a comprehensive communications strategy. Communications was tailored by audience: HR, new hires, existing employees, and senior leadership. A Field Change Team (HR professionals working at locations who helped design the site and the communications) measured the pulse of the audiences and collected input and feedback for making changes and tailoring the benefits portal.

 

Some print marketing is done to promote the annual enrollment including:

  • Special preview
  • Q&A and supporting documents
  • Reminder e-mails and v-mails
  • Enrollment packet and wallet card mailed to home
  • Payroll inserts (no longer done)
  • Local communications toolkits
  • Talking points for local HR leaders
  • Articles in local newsletters
  • Posters and computer screensavers

Baxter’s Pamela Friedman, senior manager, global HR services, says that one of the key lessons is that you can’t communicate enough! Particularly the ‘why’ and ‘what’s in it for me’ (employee). However, she adds, “The first time is always the hardest (moving online); each year gets more routine.”

 

Other key lessons offered by Friedman and her colleague Dawn Weber, corporate counsel and director, global HR services:

  • Don’t underestimate the impact of local HR reps
  • Be vigilant about shadow organizations

The key benefits to self-service benefits for Baxter have been:

  • Supporting growth
  • Employees better understand their compensation
  • Information is managed more effectively

Source: Intranet Communication Planning: Improving Understanding, Awareness, and Results, Pamela Firedman & Dawn Weber, Baster International, June 01, 2006

 

RELATED READING:

The promise of benefit portals

eHR delivers whopping value

 

For more intranet news visit www.IntranetReport.com

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media

View Article  Intranet consulting

Great intranets are rarely done solely in-house. There’s too much at stake and the intranet is far too political to not take advantage of a non-partisan intranet consultant with relevant expertise.

 

There are advantages to doing it yourself:

    • Costs less cash out of pocket
    • Internal stakeholders are forced to learn the ropes
    • Internal jobs are reinforced

The disadvantages of doing it yourself are obvious:

    • Lack of skill and experience
    • Lack of people to execute
    • Internal politics on what and how to do it
    • Time away from day-to-day work

Politics

 

The greatest barrier to an intranet’s potential is politics. Technology and budget are secondary barriers. The intranet is a political football.

 

Why? Most intranets don’t grab the attention of executives. The intranet is left to middle managers in communications and IT with limited budget and power. Conflict ensues and the intranet stalls – often for years.

 

Resolving conflict and breaking the subsequent limbo requires senior management support and participation. Where politics runs thick, a collaborative governance model is strongly urged.

 

Tearing down the political barrier often requires a third-party consultant with lots of expertise and no political axe to grind, but an arsenal full of best practices. If communications tries to lead the process, the other stakeholders will be suspicious. Ditto for IT and HR. If budget allows, everyone respects an experienced and capable mediator.

 

People

 

Building or redesigning an intranet requires a lot of work. It can take months or years. If you decide to build or rebuild the intranet, who will be minding the store?

 

An intranet requires:

    • Employee input (research)
    • Best practices intelligence (benchmarking)
    • Business requirements analysis and documentation
    • Strategic planning (mission, objective, goals, CSIs)
    • Functional planning (structure, content, etc.)
    • Governance model
    • Policies and guidelines
    • Business case and ROI
    • Content management & migration
    • Information architecture
    • Layout
    • Design
    • Tools
    • Staffing
    • Technology implementation
    • Network and database administration
    • Integration
    • Writing
    • Etc.

Hiring an intranet consultant will free-up the necessary time to stay on top of the day-to-day job you were hired for – the daily news, benefits enrollment, new application rollouts, etc.

 

Finally, does your team have the skills? Have they ever developed a governance model, an editorial policy. or an LDAP integration plan?

 

How to hire an intranet consultant

 

If you have a budget and a work culture that recognizes the value of an outside intranet expert then proceed with caution.

 

Caution: an Internet consultant is not an intranet consultant. A web design firm has deep creative skills, but rarely has any business acumen and intranet expertise. A big-five consulting firm has very smart people but is very expensive.

 

What to look for in an intranet expert:

 

·         Intranet client case studies

·         Detailed biographies with demonstrated project experience

·         Experienced individuals that will be assigned to your project

·         Client references with names and numbers (not just unnamed anonymous testimonials)

·         Detailed pricing

·         Corporate strength and documented financial viability

·         Proven and detailed project methodologies

Be cautious if a consultant only has:

 

·         Screenshots and mock-ups

·         One or two paragraph bios that focus on favorite movies and hobbies with a cute or too-cool-for-school photo

·         People on a list in some far flung office that won’t actually be working on your project

·         Unnamed and anonymous testimonials

·         Vague pricing ‘guess-timates’

·         Tiny shops with no documented financials (P&L)

·         Assurance that “they’re happy to work according to your project plan”

 

Identifying the right intranet consultant

 

Prepare a thorough and detailed RFP (request for proposal). Invite companies that have proven experience and case studies. If you don’t know one (though you should know several if you read this news blog) then look for a recommendation:

    • Ask a leading company or partner
    • Sniff around your local trade associations like IABC or PRS
    • Phone your IT analyst at Garner or Forrester
    • Google the phrase “intranet consultant” or “intranet consulting” with or without geographic locations (if that’s important to you)
    • Post a comment here and I or another reader will help steer you

The RFP responses from any intranet consulting firm should contain the following:

    • Line by line details of every process and deliverable
    • Intranet consulting history and overview
    • Detailed client case studies
    • Solution functional specifications
    • Consulting, licensing (if applicable) AND implementation costs
    • Project team resumes, skills overview & experience
    • Client references and contact information
    • Detailed timeline and schedules
    • Ongoing service & support commitment
    • Solution technical specifications (if applicable)
    • Product demonstration (if applicable)

A final word: Google before you hire a particular intranet consultant or intranet consulting firm. I’m a little bias because I write a lot, have the top blog dedicated to intranets and speak at a lot of conferences, but I like to see for myself the ‘thought leadership’ credentials of the consultant. A great intranet consultant is not only experienced, but a leader with published credentials to support it.

 

Top intranet consulting firms:

Note: obviously there are far more consultants than this… but actually surprisingly few that focus namely on just intranets. So yes I’ve left a few out, but this is not intended to be a consultant directory but an article (also note that the author hasn’t used his own name).

 

For more intranet news visit www.IntranetReport.com

 

© 2006 Toby Ward - Prescient Digital Media

Search
    follow me on Twitter