Summary: For years, workplace wellbeing was treated as something separate from work itself.
Organizations introduced wellness apps, occasional wellbeing campaigns, and optional initiatives designed to support employees outside their normal workflow. While these efforts increased awareness around mental health and wellbeing, participation often remained inconsistent.
Today, organizations are beginning to rethink that model.
The conversation is shifting away from “offering wellbeing” and toward designing workdays that support wellbeing naturally through rhythm, accessibility, recovery, and human connection.
This shift reflects a broader understanding that well-being is not only influenced by benefits or programs. It is shaped continuously by how employees experience work every day.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
WHY TRADITIONAL WELL-BEING MODELS ARE CHANGING
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ACCESS AND PARTICIPATION
HOW DAILY WORK SHAPES WELL-BEING
WHY SMALL MOMENTS MATTER MORE THAN LARGE INITIATIVES
WHAT EMPLOYEES ACTUALLY NEED DURING THE WORKDAY
HOW ORGANIZATIONS ARE REDESIGNING WORK AROUND WELL-BEING
HOW PLEAZ SUPPORTS EVERYDAY WELL-BEING
BOTTOM LINE
Most organizations today already offer some form of workplace well-being support.
This may include:
Yet many companies continue to experience high levels of stress, burnout, and disengagement.
One reason is that well-being is often treated as something employees are expected to access separately from work itself.
During busy workdays, employees may fully support the idea of well-being while still struggling to engage with optional resources consistently.
This has led organizations to question whether traditional well-being models truly fit the realities of modern work.
Providing well-being resources does not automatically create meaningful participation.
Research from Wellhub’s Return on Wellbeing Report highlights that organizations increasingly recognize participation and consistency as major factors influencing wellbeing outcomes.
Employees often face practical barriers such as:
As a result, well-being becomes something employees intend to prioritize rather than something they consistently experience during the workday.
This distinction between access and actual participation is becoming one of the biggest conversations in workplace wellbeing.
Employee well-being is shaped less by occasional initiatives and more by the structure of everyday work itself.
Workday experiences such as:
All of these factors influence stress levels, energy, focus, and emotional well-being throughout the day.
Research from McKinsey’s work on employee experience highlights how everyday emotional experiences strongly shape engagement, motivation, and workplace satisfaction.
This reflects a growing understanding that workplace wellbeing is not only about support systems. It is also about how work itself is designed and experienced.
Organizations often focus heavily on large well-being initiatives because they are visible and easy to communicate internally.
However, behavioral science increasingly shows that small repeated experiences often influence well-being more strongly over time.
Research from University College London’s habit formation research suggests that behaviors connected to existing routines are significantly more likely to become sustainable habits.
This applies directly to workplace wellbeing.
Employees are more likely to participate in:
When these activities fit naturally into the workday itself. Consistency often creates more lasting impact than intensity.
WHAT EMPLOYEES ACTUALLY NEED DURING THE WORKDAY
Modern employees often do not need more information about well-being.
What they frequently need instead is:
Research from Microsoft’s Work Trend Index continues to highlight the growing pressure employees experience from digital overload, meeting fatigue, and constant communication.
This has increased the importance of creating work environments that support:
Organizations are increasingly recognizing that well-being cannot depend only on activities outside work hours. It must also exist within the workday itself.
Many organizations are now shifting toward wellbeing approaches that focus less on isolated initiatives and more on everyday employee experience.
This includes:
The focus is increasingly moving toward designing work in ways that employees can realistically sustain long-term.
Practical Changes Organizations Are Introducing
These changes may seem small individually, but together they significantly influence how employees experience work every day.
One challenge many organizations face is helping employees engage with wellbeing consistently during busy workdays.
Pleaz supports everyday well-being by helping teams introduce small moments of recovery, movement, and connection directly into their normal workday routines.
Integrated into Microsoft Teams, Pleaz enables employees to participate in guided wellbeing activities naturally during meetings or transitions between tasks.
Examples include:
Rather than positioning wellbeing as something separate from work, Pleaz helps organizations make wellbeing part of the daily employee experience itself.
Employee well-being is shaped less by occasional wellness initiatives and more by how employees experience work throughout the day.
When recovery, movement, connection, and pauses are treated as separate activities outside normal work, participation often becomes inconsistent. Most employees simply do not have the time or mental space to engage with additional routines during already demanding schedules.
Organizations are increasingly recognizing that wellbeing works best when it is built directly into how teams communicate, collaborate, and structure their day.
This is why many companies are shifting away from isolated wellbeing campaigns and focusing more on:
The goal is no longer just to offer well-being resources. It is to create work environments where wellbeing can realistically happen without employees needing to step away from work entirely.
That shift is changing how organizations think about workplace wellbeing altogether.