echo interview, August 2024

Care and perform – only a balanced employer is a good employer

ELIPSLIFE ECHO – A SERIES OF DISCUSSIONS WITH COMPANY REPRESENTATIVES ON CORE TOPICS FROM THE KTG AND UVG ECOSYSTEM

echo interview with Lea Ryter Ciampi

echo interview with Lea Ryter Ciampi, Head of Human Resources, Hilti (Switzerland) AG

elipsLife echo: Ms Ryter Ciampi, how have work-related health problems and absences developed at Hilti?
There has undoubtedly been a massive increase in both absences from work due to mental health problems and those due to illness in general since the coronavirus pandemic. We had a 15% increase in absences due to illness from 2021 to 2022, and this actually rose to 42% from 2022 to 2023. So far it looks as if there will be a slight decline in the current year, but much can still change before the end of the year.

The workplace has a major impact on mental well-being, as shown by the recently published Axa Mind Health Study. According to the study, work-related stress and health problems cause an annual GDP loss of CHF 17.5 billion – in Switzerland alone. Does this finding surprise you?
Not really: this figure reflects my experience at Hilti. Although Hilti is considered a very good employer, our company is also confronted with stressful issues. HR colleagues from other companies also tell me time and again that mental well-being is in general a big and costly topic.

As you mentioned, Hilti is considered an excellent employer. The Great Place To Work® organisation has declared Hilti the winner for 2024. What makes your company better than others?

We have been working intensively on our employee culture for years. Hilti knows all about the so-called "culture journey". Each market organisation has a full-time position called a "Sherpa", whose sole responsibility is to foster the employee culture. This person conducts two-day team camps every two to three years with all employees (around 520 in Switzerland). The aim is to find a common language in dealing with the chosen topic. Hilti is a “Great Place to Work” because we work on the quality of our workplace. Our corporate culture is very important to us and we treat each other particularly well. Both our General Manager and Ambassadors across the company hierarchy ensure that our “care and perform” approach works and remains balanced.

In a nutshell: what makes a good employer today?
Finding a balance between performance and taking care of employees. An employer must take its employees seriously and enable them to experience this.

At Hilti, employee well-being and occupational health management are a priority. Does this have to do with the corporate culture or is it simply worth investing in the well-being of your employees?
We do not ask ourselves whether it pays off. The culture journey, the Sherpas and the internal processes are in place. We do this because we are convinced that we are doing the right thing. However, when I look at the increasing number of lost working hours, the costs are certainly relevant – at the latest when our insurance company complains about the rise in absences during the insurance contract negotiations, which are held every four years. This raises the question of what we can do about this together within the scope of the selected elipsLife prevention package. Although Hilti invests heavily in the well-being of its employees, we also have issues we wish to continue focusing on.

What led Hilti to invest in occupational health management?
It is not an investment in occupational health management per se, but in cultural work. We are strengthening our sense of togetherness. This will make us more sustainable in the long term. There is a direct correlation between cultural work and health because the psychological component is very important. Even company founder Martin Hilti described the employees as his greatest asset, which must be taken care of. Hilti’s fundamental approach of “care and perform” therefore goes back to the company founder himself. His son Michael Hilti maintained this attitude and started the culture journey to ensure there was a balance between caring and performance. Hilti today is an incredibly fast-moving and complex company. We would barely be able to cope with the challenges we face without cultural work.

Corporate culture – a term often quoted and yet the meaning of the word is difficult to grasp. What do you think is a “good corporate culture”?
A good corporate culture is characterised by listening to your people and taking their needs into account. Firstly, this requires managers who work with people and not just tell them what to do. Secondly, employees’ views must be sought. And thirdly – at least at Hilti – we need around 60 Great Place-to-Work Ambassadors. They help make Hilti an attractive employer. Our ambassadors are enthusiastic about their work. They have realised that they can make a difference with cultural work.

Are corporate culture, fringe benefits and occupational health management already issues that are discussed in job interviews?
Fringe benefits are always a topic discussed in job interviews, although Hilti does not offer a wide range of benefits. Nevertheless, we are able to be an attractive employer because we do well in terms of other benefits. For example, in collaboration with Kyan Health, an ETH start-up, we have launched an app that employees can use to reflect on themselves, meditate, consult a coach or even seek psychological support. The app offers various modules, but also allows employees to call a psychologist at any time for immediate support by telephone. We offer this support not only to our employees, but also to their relatives living in the same household. And about a year after its launch, we can see that the app is being actively used.

Which health issues are most important to employees?
Not mental health per se, but stress and coping with pressure. This has increased sharply since the coronavirus pandemic. I have the impression that people today are less resilient. Whether this is due to isolation during the pandemic, a consequence of rapid technological developments, other aspects or a mix of different causes, I cannot say. At any rate, growing personal pressure and pressure in the workplace have made life more intense and are pushing more and more people to their limits.

Since when have you noticed this development?
This has been increasing since the transition to the post-pandemic phase. While we had an average of one burnout case per year at Hilti before the pandemic, today the figure is significantly higher. An increasing number of people are finding it difficult to keep pace mentally. It is also striking that prior to the pandemic, employees aged 50 and over were more likely to be affected. Today I have 22- and 26-year-olds who tell me that everything is too much for them.

Does Hilti Switzerland employ its own case manager to assist employees with their reintegration?
The Sherpas are full-time cultural managers, but we don’t employ our own case manager. Hilti has concluded a prevention package with elipsLife enabling us to activate a case manager at any time. The case manager is a professional whose job is to support people affected by listening to them and assessing what they hear. This enables them to act as a professional advisor to those affected who can make recommendations on administrative matters and refer them to doctors and psychologists.

Do SMEs receive sufficient support from insurers?
Each SME has to ask itself what it is willing to invest in order to get the support it needs. I have experience of different insurers with which supplementary packages can be taken out. It goes without saying that these cost money. These costs are not questioned at Hilti because prevention is something we value. However, whether it is still appropriate to have to take out additional packages for prevention is another question. In my view, these services should be part of every basic package.

Personal Profile
Lea Ryter Campi
Head of Human Resources, Hilti (Switzerland) AG

Lea Ryter Ciampi, born in 1980, Swiss national, has been Head of Human Resources at Hilti Switzerland AG since May 2020. After graduating in business administration from the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland, she began her career by specialising in human resources in the chemical industry. She then switched to the pharmaceutical industry and spent almost five years with Bosch as HR Corporate Manager and HR Director for Switzerland. She is the mother of one daughter (12) and one son (10), lives in Olten and enjoys spending her free time with her children, exercising (road cycling, jogging, swimming) and with her friends.

echo interview with Lea Ryter Campi

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