Six Tips for Relocating Employees that Attract & Retain Talent

Employee relocations or even temporary assignments to a new location can be complicated and stressful for your employees. You’re not just shifting employees from one location to another, you’re uprooting them from their community, friends, extended family, and everything familiar. You’re also moving their partner, children, and pets. As an employer, you have a huge responsibility when moving an employee and family to a new city, state, or even country. It’s very important that the employee’s move experience is as stress-free as possible. Employee relocations handled correctly will help your organization attract and retain valuable top talent.

1. Consider Employees’ Emotional & Mental Health: Meet their Needs

If a relocation is not handled well, the employer risks losing the employee to another company – someone whom your company may have already invested time and money into. If you want to attract and retain top talent, and you consider your employees one of your most valuable assets, remember to address more than just relocation costs and logistics. Taking care of an employee’s emotional health will pay out for years to come. Is your relocation policy meeting your employees’ needs? The right policy helps to reduce transferee stress so that employees can focus on working in their new location.

Do:

  • Give employees time off to assimilate in their new location. Many organizations give employees 2-3 paid days off.
  • Provide support to transferees’ families (spousal assistance, language lessons).
  • Gather employee post-relocation feedback to make future policy decisions (WHR Global sends out a 1-year post-relocation survey).
  • Have your Relocation Management Company (RMC) help with logistics including visas, shipping, customs fees and clearances, transportation, legal issues, and more.

The stress of moving might impact an employee’s mental health and subsequently, engagement with their employer. Transferees and their families may face a host of potential emotional and mental tolls from a relocation. According to an article in Employee Benefit News, “When it comes to employee relocation, most organizations focus on the nuts and bolts, thinking strategically about the costs associated with the move and what will be the most affordable option to get their people from point A to point B. It makes sense from a business perspective, but it’s not how to make a relocation successful. Employers must remember they are moving people, not just boxes. Any time you deal with people, you need to adopt a human-centered approach. While you’re helping them get their belongings from one place to the next, they’re dealing with switching insurances, licenses, and addresses. If they have a family, they need to enroll their children in new schools, find doctors, and a new job for their spouse or partner. On top of that, they might be dealing with some negative emotions from their family, unhappy with the move. All of this can influence how your employee feels about their new position and how they assimilate into their new role.”

 

Be Aware:

  • If one or more family members are unhappy with the move and having trouble settling in, the stress could affect the employee too. The employee might be feeling distracted, disengaged, or unhappy, and they might even consider leaving the new role and moving back to their original location. Uprooting an entire family’s life and acclimating to a new community can be stressful.
  • If an employee becomes disengaged, productivity could decline. The transferring employee may be worried about whether the new job will work out. A tired, disengaged, or distracted employee’s attitude may be felt by other team members and affect team dynamics.
  • Employee stress associated with moving to a new location might also include concerns about a partner’s career, children’s education, learning new languages, cultural differences, selling their old home, leaving old coworkers behind, or concerns about the new destination’s real estate market or crime rates.

“The Great Resignation is unprecedented; recruiters are competing against talent ready for a change and even talent that has been placed within the last two years. Employers will need to be strategic in their efforts to hire and retain.”

Kimberley Uitz, SHRM-CP, GPHR

WHR Global Human Resources Manager

Do:

Make sure you have a relocation policy that includes all potential support. The following list includes just some of the possible benefits to consider:

  • Immigration & Visa Support
  • Tax Assistance
  • Household Goods Move
  • Help Buying & Selling Homes, Finding Rentals
  • Language & Cultural Training
  • Medical Options (healthcare coverage, medical evacuation services)
  • Education Options (tuition reimbursement, tutoring)
  • Transportation Information
  • Utility Connections
  • Education Assistance
  • Site Visits/Area Orientation
  • Temporary Storage
  • Family Support
  • Ongoing Assignment Support
  • Destination Services
  • Temporary Housing
  • Driver’s License and Registration Information
  • Spousal/Partner Career Assistance

 

2. Benchmark Relocation Policy Against the Competition

Hopefully, your relocation policy is already part of your total rewards and talent management strategy. By benchmarking your policy against other companies, you will stay competitive in the war for talent. Make sure your policy provides a choice of offerings since relocation policies are wrapped into job offers. If you don’t benchmark against your competitors, you won’t know if your offerings are good or not. Are they subpar to what everyone else is offering? If you are hiring scientists, for example, and the talent is very specific and not easy to come by, you’ll want to make sure you’re competitive with salary, benefits, and your relocation policy. The right policy will help your company retain current employees and attract top prospective candidates. A weak relocation policy could have a negative impact on your recruiting and retention success rate. 

At the same time, benchmarking will ensure you’re not giving away too much when none of your competitors are doing that. Benchmarking your policy against others shows you’re in line with the industry. Maybe you’re offering unnecessary benefits and eliminating those offerings could yield cost savings. It’s also important to look at your industry and other industries you compete with for talent.

3. Compensate for Cost-of-Living Differences

Some of your employees may be moving to an area with a lower cost of living and some may be moving to a much higher-cost destination. If higher costs exist, provide a limited-term cost of living allowance to bridge the financial gap. Options for payout could include monthly, quarterly, annually, or a one-time lump sum. Set an ending time for this benefit and decide whether the benefit will slowly decrease or taper. It is best to only offer this benefit to those employees moving to higher-cost destinations; if your employee is moving from one high-cost of living area to another, consider withholding this benefit. Often, employers will establish a threshold (typically a percentage), for the benefit. Other employers will identify specific areas and only offer the benefit to employees moving to predetermined locations such as Boston, Chicago city limits, New York City, San Francisco, Geneva, Paris, London, Singapore, and Shanghai, for example.

4. Review your Relocation Policy

Review your employee relocation policy annually or every couple of years, at the very longest. It’s an opportunity to pause and look at employee survey feedback, plus confirm any changes in your company culture, driving principles, core values, talent strategy, the industry, and your competition. Make sure you’re allocating the right amount of dollars to both transferees and organizational needs. It’s also important you’re not paying for unneeded or outdated benefits. Lastly, review the purpose of your relocation program. This is a time for you to make sure your policy is aligned with your key stakeholders (talent acquisition teams, recruiting teams, and HR business partners).

To summarize, there are many benefits you’ll want to consider including in your relocation policy (not an all-inclusive list):

  • Home Sale (Guaranteed Buyout versus Buyer Value Option)
  • Direct Reimbursement
  • Policy Tiers vs Core Flex Benefits
  • Lump Sums (Lump Sum Only; Managed Lump Sum; Lump Sum in addition to other benefits)
  • Cost of Living Assistance (COLA)
  • Home Inspections (Major and/or Specialized)
  • Home Sale Bonuses
  • Loss on Sale
  • Rental Assistance/Lease Break Assistance
  • Destination Services (Temporary Housing, House Hunting Trips, Destination Closing Costs, Renter Destination Services)
  • Household Goods Movement (Vehicle Shipment; Temporary Storage)
  • Policy Exceptions

 

5. Compensate Employees for Their Tax Burdens

Tax Assistance & Tax Equalization

If you’re competing for talent and your competitors are compensating for tax burdens and you are not, you could lose in the war for talent. By offering tax benefits, you can take away some objections you might receive from current or future employees regarding relocation or assignment. Remember, in December 2017, the US government passed legislation that directly impacted taxpayers. Under the 2017 law, known as the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act (TCJA), taxpayers are unable to claim certain deductions, including job-related moving expenses.

Do:

Provide Tax Assistance

This alleviates some of the tax burdens on a portion of the employee’s income. Also referred to as gross-up, this is the additional money an employer pays their employee to offset any additional income taxes the employee would owe the IRS when that employee receives a company-provided cash benefit, like relocation expenses.

Tax Assistance Benefits
  • Helps your relocation program remain competitive
  • Improves employee retention and attraction
  • Alleviates some of the employee’s tax burdens
  • Lowers employee stress, allowing the transferee to focus on the new role sooner

Do:

Provide Tax Equalization

Tax equalization neutralizes an assignee’s tax liability associated with a global assignment. This compensation approach means an assignee pays approximately the same taxes if they remained in their home country. In other words, the assignee is not paying more or less had they not left their home country, regardless of the actual tax burden in the home and host country. WHR estimates that 95% of all global mobility programs offer tax assistance.

 

Tax Equalization Benefits
  • Decreases expatriate stress and allows the assignee to focus on the new role sooner. The less economic stress an employee feels, the more they can focus on the personal and professional development of an international opportunity.
  • Improves employee retention and recruiting efforts since the assignee would not have a tax reason to turn down a foreign assignment, transfer from one foreign country to another, or be repatriated.
  • Limits tax burden. Maintains a comparable home country tax basis for the assignee while on a foreign assignment. This means the assignee’s tax gain or loss is minimized and equalized as much as possible and remains the same had the assignee stayed in the home country.
  • Facilitates positive corporate citizenship for tax compliance in every location the company operates and eliminates the risk of local law non-compliance, tax regulations, and exchange rate controls.
“By providing tax benefits, employers help offset tax burdens for employees, and in doing so, some of the stress typically associated with relocations or international assignments can be decreased. When you consider that these benefits also help companies stay competitive, it’s a win-win for everyone,”
Jami Long

WHR Global CFO

6. Hire a Professional Relocation Management Company (RMC) that Provides 24/7/365 Dedicated Assistance to You and Your Employees

Moving is considered one of the most stressful events in a person’s life. Add in crossing international borders, plus taking care of one’s partner and children, and that stress can be even higher. The right Relocation Management Company (RMC) will partner with your organization to write, implement, and manage a global relocation program that meets your company goals and helps you attract and retain the talent you need for success.

Contact Us!

Find helpful relocation resources and guides in our Relocation Toolbox

Updates from Around the World – February 2019

international relocation

China

The new individual income tax (IIT) law came into effect on January 1, 2019, and affects foreign individuals who live in China for 183 days or more. According to Dezan Shira & Associates, the new regulation is likely to give more room for expatriates to avoid taxation on worldwide income.
Read more about the individual income tax (IIT) law (in Chinese). 

Greece

Effective February 1, 2019, the minimum monthly salary for foreign workers in Greece has increased to EUR 650 for employees of all ages, up 11 percent from last year. As before, benefits and allowances may only be included in the minimum salary calculation if they are specified in the employment contract and are not paid in kind.
Read more about the minimum monthly salary for foreign workers in Greece.

Mexico

Review of immigration applications has been delayed several weeks past normal processing times in Mexico City, Guadalajara, Querétaro and several other large cities due to the transition to a new government. Employers and foreign nationals should expect delayed work start dates.
Read more about the delayed immigration processing.

United Kingdom

The British parliament voted in favor of the government’s proposed immigration bill, aimed to ensure it has an independent immigration policy after Brexit, late on January 28, 2019. EU citizens who plan to stay for longer than three months will need to apply for permission and receive European Temporary Leave to Remain, which is valid for a further three years.
Read more about the British parliament’s vote.

United States

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is open following the government shut-down and accepting 2018 federal tax returns as of January 28, 2019. Most refunds are anticipated to be sent in less than 21 days.
Read more about the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) reopening.

 

Cultivating a Culture of Teamwork

Cultural training for employees who will be working internationally is perhaps more important today than ever before.  For many companies, there has been a significant paradigm shift away from the strictly bi-cultural focus of such training, opting instead for an approach that prepares the employee for working within a multi-cultural environment.  Ideally, such training is the first step in cultivating a culture of teamwork within an organization.

In so doing, companies are able to set themselves and their employees up for greater success, while mitigating the risk of assignment failure and/or employee attrition.

Why is multi-cultural training essential today?

Given the backdrop of the global business landscape, an employee who embarks on an overseas assignment will not necessarily merely be working with a local team.  Instead, it is far more likely that the employee will be part of a global team.  That means that he or she will be working side-by-side with people of many different nationalities, cultures and backgrounds.

In putting together a global team, an organization needs to ensure that each member of that team is able to effectively work with the other members.  To accomplish that, each member of the team needs to be able to communicate with one another, and to understand some of the key differences in their cultural backgrounds.

Setting the team up for success

That’s where cultural or multi-cultural training comes in.  In many cases, it’s the best insurance policy that an organization has for setting a global team up for success.

In a nutshell, cultural training is designed to set the employee up for success prior to the assignment, by setting expectations about life in the host country, and providing coping strategies, tools and resources to help make that happen.

From a talent mobility and talent management perspective, sending employees overseas is often a critical component for achieving an organization’s business goals.  But, it is also an increasingly expensive undertaking.  Not only is the physical move itself costly, but it can also cost an organization considerably in the loss of talent.

Thus, the investment in cultural training is vital from an employee retention standpoint. Without that support and commitment to the employee’s career success, an organization could end up losing a valuable employee altogether.

Communication is the key

Communication is obviously a fundamental factor for global teams to be able to effectively work together.  But, communication across cultures can be very tricky.  Speaking the same language is great, but communication and cultural understanding requires much more than the ability to speak a language.

Through cultural training, employees also learn how to be more tolerant of each other, and they have an opportunity to gain greater insight into the cultural nuances that typically exist.  So, it’s important to recognize the key role that communication (which can be verbal and nonverbal), plays in the process.

A win-win for the employee and organization

The idea is to bring members of a global team together in a way that fosters good communication, collaboration and interaction.  If done properly, it can be a real win-win for both the employee and the organization.  To best achieve such mutual success, cultural training has to go beyond the traditional model of preparing employees to live and thrive in a new country.

Today, cultural training also needs to provide the skills necessary for employees to work with people from many cultures and countries.  It is no longer a one-on-one relationship, but rather a one-to-many relationship.

How WHR Group can help

Our company has global partnerships with industry experts across the globe, enabling us to provide cultural and language training services to help expats and their families prepare for relocation abroad. For more information on how WHR Group can assist your employees with their international move and new assignment, give us a call at 800-523-3318 or email [email protected].

WRITTEN BY: MICHELLE SANDLIN, SCRP, GMS-T

Michelle Sandlin, SCRP, GMS-T is an award-winning freelance writer and weekly columnist for the Houston Chronicle. She is also a frequent contributor to Mobility Magazine, as well as other publications, corporate blogs and white papers. She can be reached at 281.831.3112 or [email protected].

3 Benefits to Offer Your International Assignees

A strong cultural and language training program is one of the most important benefits you can offer employees who are moving abroad. International relocation is stressful on the employee as well as their family, which is why it is so easy for an employee to struggle in a new country, especially if they don’t understand the culture, customs, business culture, and language. This can lead to seclusion, depression, and ultimately, a failed transfer.
<img alt="international relocation">,<img alt="employee relocation">,<img alt="WHR Group">

Offering cultural and language assistance will allow your employee to assimilate into the new culture as quickly as possible, providing them with the tools they will need to not only succeed in their new role but thrive in their new environment as well.

International assignments are challenging for all involved: the employee, the spouse, their children, and your company. You can make the transition easier for all by offering these 3 benefits:

1. Cultural Training

Culture shock often occurs when your employees and their families are dropped into a new situation without any knowledge of their new environment. Cultural training isn’t just about learning the host country’s environment and culture, it is also about helping your employee understand their new business culture. Even though your employee may be just transferring offices, the business practices can vary greatly between different countries.

It is also important for you to find and share outside activities that will assist your employees in meeting new people, allowing them to learn the new culture and language in a more social setting. The more they immerse themselves into the culture, the happier they will be in their new position and new lifestyle.

Help and encourage your employees to learn about their new country’s history, common business and social practices, and the local customs. This ensures they truly feel at home in their new location.

2. Language Training

Language training is a benefit that is often overlooked when transferring an employee internationally. Because English is the standard business language, it is just assumed that English is the only language they will need. While this may be true in the sense that they will be able to communicate the essentials at their new office, you also have to consider how they will be able to interact outside of work. Things that were once simple, like going to the grocery store or hosting a dinner party, become daunting.

Language skills are essential to not only help your employees advance in their new positions, but also fully assimilate into their new country. Language training can begin the moment the employee accepts their new position with the use of online tools and/or in person language training sessions, and can continue even after they make the transfer.

3. Spousal and Family Assistance

Spousal and family assistance is another way of ensuring your employees experience success in their new location. The most common reason for failed transfers is family related issues. Often times, the family is forgotten about when it comes to the benefits offered. Spouses and partners leave behind careers and extended family; children leave the schools and friends they’ve come to rely on.

Offering assistance to the families of relocating employees makes the transfer more successful. The employee’s spouse may need help finding a new job or even finding the best stores to shop at. They, too, may need to find social groups to help them engage in their new environment and assistance in learning the new language. Schools are another major consideration when relocating families abroad. Children will need to learn the new culture and language as well, all while acclimating to their new school system.

Spousal and family assistance should include both cultural and language training and should begin as soon as your employee accepts their new role.

Download our Sample International Relocation Letter Today!

Use this sample International Relocation Letter to help move your employees to any location, across the globe. This template includes everything you need to get started!

How WHR Group Can Help

WHR has global partnerships with industry experts all over the world, allowing us to deliver cultural and language training services to relocating employees and their families. These experts have been evaluated to design flexible training programs based on a professional assessment of the individual’s and family’s needs, including online and/or face-to-face training preferences. We also track and report on training completion, which is provided to ensure the effectiveness of the program for everyone involved.

Contact WHR Group today for more information on our global mobility services and how to implement your culture and language training program: 800-523-3318 or [email protected].

What to Know About Relocating Goods Internationally

When moving internationally, one of the biggest decisions your employees will have to make is whether to ship their personal belongings to their new location or buy new after the move.

For employees wanting to ship their belongings, there are some things to consider:

  • Customs requirements in the departure and destination countries
  • The size of their shipment
  • Shipping options available
  • How the selected shipping option affects delivery timeframes

Similar to a U.S. relocation, international movers will pack an employee’s goods themselves, as the mov­ers are trained experts in evaluating items for international freight and making sure no items are includ­ed that violate customs. This could cause major delays in delivery. Detailed inventory forms need to be completed for both customs and insurance purposes. It’s important for your employees to complete these forms in a timely manner to avoid delays or penalties.

 

Types of International Shipments

Air Shipments

Air shipments are for smaller containers shipped via air. The shipments typically have a shorter tran­sit time of 1 – 2 weeks. Air containers are ideal for personal items needed shortly after arrival in the new location, such as clothes and children’s toys.

There are two main types of air containers: D containers and LDN containers, which are both pre-built containers:

  • D containers are ideal for the essential be- longings of individuals or smaller families
  • LDN containers are more typical for larg- er families, or for those not planning to transport goods via sea as well
Sea Freight

Depending on destination location, many interna­tional moves require the use of sea shipments. Sea shipments are ideal for larger shipments but have transit times of anywhere from a few weeks to a few months. Transit times are impacted by customs and practices of both the departure country and the destination country. Freight containers are metal and come in three main sizes: 20 ft., 40 ft., and 40 ft. high capacity containers:

  • 20 ft. containers are ideal for 2 – 3 bed-rooms, or individuals and small families
  • 40 ft. containers are most ideal for 4 – 5 bedrooms, or larger families with children

The moving company will conduct a visit at the employee’s home to determine which shipping option and container size is ideal for each situation.

How WHR Group Can Help

WHR Group works with a network of international movers that specialize in packing and customs requirements. It is important to support your employees with experts that understand these require­ments and what can and cannot be included in their international shipments so that your employees arrive comfortably to their new home.