Harvard Business Review Analytic Services Survey Highlights Missed Opportunities for Those Without Tuition Assistance Benefits
28 March 2024 - 4:31AM
Business Wire
The Harvard Business Review Analytic Services (HBR-AS) released
findings from a survey, sponsored by Strategic Education, Inc., of
business leadership* that show organizations may be missing out on
a key upskilling and retention tool. Ninety-one percent agree that
tuition assistance (TA) benefits programs can give organizations a
competitive advantage by upskilling the workforce. The survey also
revealed that nearly 90% of business leadership agree that, for
organizations in their industry, there is strategic value in
offering tuition assistance benefits to employees.
Yet, despite this agreement, the survey highlights an inherent
paradox and an opportunity for employers to gain a competitive
advantage. Eighty-five percent of the business leadership surveyed
agree that the positive outcomes from offering tuition assistance
benefits outweigh the costs of paying for employees’ education.
Despite this, 39% of business leadership say their organization has
not evaluated or made updates to its TA program within the past
three years.
“This survey confirms what we consistently hear from the
employers we work with – that TA benefits are a critical retention
and upskilling tool,” said Karl McDonnell, Chief Executive Officer
of Strategic Education, Inc. “Yet, despite its value, its
prioritization by employers varies significantly. There is
tremendous opportunity for employers to evaluate and update this
benefit so they meet the needs of both employees and the
organization.”
The survey found several common reasons organizations offer TA
benefits to their employee base. Among business leadership, their
organizations’ most common, primary motivations for offering a
program are to build the workforce skills needed for the future
(51%), improve employee retention (50%), develop high-potential
talent (47%), and increase talent attraction/hiring (43%).
The business leadership surveyed also suggested a lack of
measurement of TA benefits. When asked what key performance
indicators their organization uses to measure success of the
program, the most common performance indicators included impact on
employee retention (29%), skills or competencies gained by
participants (27%), and participation rates (25%).
The HBR-AS survey found that respondents overwhelmingly
recognize the potential value of TA benefits programs, for both the
employer and the employees:
- 89% agree that, for organizations in their industry, there is
strategic value in offering TA benefits to employees.
- 88% agree that an organization can make its employees feel more
engaged at work by offering TA benefits.
- 86% agree that their organization’s TA program is valuable for
the organization.
Despite respondent agreement on the value of TA benefits, the
survey found that certain barriers prevent organizations from
offering them and employees from using them. Among respondents
whose organizations do not have a TA benefits program, 68% believe
program cost is a barrier to adoption. At organizations with active
TA benefit programs, 45% of respondents identified employees not
feeling they have enough time to pursue education while working as
one of the challenges their organization faces with their TA
program.
“Like any benefit, tuition benefit programs need to evolve to
meet shifting employee and workforce demands. This may mean
offering more incentives and support to employees who want to use
the benefit or partnering with a tuition benefit platform that
makes enrollment and measurement seamless,” explained McDonnell.
“To get the most out of this benefit, employers should commit to
measuring the impact of the program on the organization,
identifying what is working and what is not, and modifying as
needed.”
To read the full results, visit:
https://hbr.org/sponsored/2024/03/realizing-and-unlocking-the-strategic-value-of-tuition-assistance-benefits.
*In 2023, Strategic Education, Inc. sponsored Harvard Business
Review Analytic Services to conduct a survey of 294 members of the
HBR audience (75% are in executive or senior management, 13% in
middle management, and 12% in other grades) who are involved in
their organization’s decisions about offering U.S. TA benefits.
About Harvard Business Review
Harvard Business Review Analytic Services is an independent
commercial research unit within Harvard Business Review Group,
conducting research and comparative analysis on important
management challenges and emerging business opportunities. Seeking
to provide business intelligence and peer-group insight, each
report is published based on the findings of original quantitative
and/or qualitative research and analysis. Quantitative surveys are
conducted with the HBR Advisory Council, HBR’s global research
panel, and qualitative research is conducted with senior business
executives and subject matter experts from within and beyond the
Harvard Business Review author community.
About Strategic Education, Inc.
Strategic Education, Inc. (NASDAQ: STRA)
(www.strategiceducation.com) is dedicated to helping advance
economic mobility through higher education. We primarily serve
working adult students globally through our core focus areas: 1)
U.S. Higher Education, including Capella University and Strayer
University, each institutionally accredited, and collectively offer
flexible and affordable associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and
doctoral programs including the Jack Welch Management Institute at
Strayer University, and non-degree web and mobile application
development courses through Strayer University’s Hackbright Academy
and Devmountain; 2) Education Technology Services, developing and
maintaining relationships with employers to build education
benefits programs providing employees access to affordable and
industry-relevant training, certificate, and degree programs,
including through Workforce Edge, a full-service education benefits
administration solution for employers, and Sophia Learning,
enabling education benefits programs through low-cost online
general education-level courses that are ACE-recommended for
college credit; and 3) Australia/New Zealand, comprised of Torrens
University, Think Education, and Media Design School that
collectively offer certificate and degree programs in Australia and
New Zealand. This portfolio of high quality, innovative, relevant,
and affordable programs and institutions helps our students prepare
for success in today’s workforce and find a path to bettering their
lives.
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Elaine Kincel 202-557-4920 Media.relations@strategiced.com
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