In top-performing organizations, absence management methods are part of an overall company management strategy. Other components of that strategy will include training managers to build trust with employees.
This trust leads to more engaged employees that tend to have fewer absences.
An overall company wellness program can also improve absenteeism rates. Successful wellness programs encourage employees to exercise regularly, quit smoking, make healthy meals, and wash hands frequently. Some even include financial incentives for meeting these wellness goals.
The following employee perks, training, and policy updates can further help business leaders boost their absence management efforts.
Create a return-to-work process
A return-to-work process establishes what employees need to do when they feel ready to return to work after a leave period. For example, a company might specify that employees must follow a return-to-work policy if they've been out for more than three to five days.
Typically, the policy will outline employees' steps to return to work. Employees may be required to provide doctor’s notes or sign updated agreements to resume machine operation.
The employer might also need to provide accommodations to the employee. Examples include providing a chair with arms, lighter initial duties, or a phased-in return to full-time employment.
These policies may also refer employees to an Employee Assistance Program. You’d likely see this when an employee is dealing with mental illness, a family crisis, or a debilitating disease.
Offer remote work options
Businesses can institute policies to give employees more flexibility in their work. Often the flexibility can prevent absences and burnout.
Remote working policies would specify which types of jobs are eligible for remote work. They should also detail the procedure for gaining approval to work remotely and how managers will measure performance for remote employees.
It also will determine what remote work software and equipment the company would provide vs. what the employee provides.
Allow for flexible scheduling
Flexible hours can also prevent absenteeism and improve employee engagement. When employees have more flexibility to balance home and work responsibilities, they’re less likely to miss work.
A fully developed absence management policy will include information about flexible work, proof of work, and performance expectations.
Provide policy training for management
For absence management strategies to be effective, managers need to understand the policies and how to implement them.
If they’re responsible for reducing absenteeism, they’ll need to know how to balance employees’ individual needs with company needs.
Labor laws sometimes require that management treat all employees in similar situations identically. Certain regulations will also require specific record-keeping. Management training should include all these compliance requirements.
Encourage work-life balance
In the United Kingdom, the average worker uses only 62 percent of their annual leave. In the United States, the average worker used about 67 percent of their annual leave in 2021.
Taking breaks improves decision-making, mental health, and overall health. How can we encourage taking breaks and using time off from work wisely? By setting a good example.
Managers can set a good wellness example for employees by using all of their leave. It is also crucial not to punish team members for taking necessary or optional breaks from work — as long as it doesn’t disrupt their team or projects.
Use an absence management software
An absence management policy is only effective if management can successfully implement and monitor it. Unfortunately, 42 percent of U.S. companies said they lacked the staff to manage employee absenteeism effectively.
Absence management software can automate the process. This way, absenteeism management won’t require additional administrative work.
Workforce management software can automatically manage employee time-off requests. It also tracks when an employee fails to show up for a shift, shows up late, or leaves early.
The best part? This data helps managers spot attendance trends and intervene before the problem gets out of hand.