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Companies Struggle to Meet Rising Demand for Personalized Benefits, Aon Survey Finds

Business

Companies Struggle to Meet Rising Demand for Personalized Benefits, Aon Survey Finds
Business

Business

Companies Struggle to Meet Rising Demand for Personalized Benefits, Aon Survey Finds

2025-07-29 16:00 Last Updated At:16:15

Global survey of benefits professionals found only 14 percent of multinationals have global guidelines in place to support personalization

DUBLIN, July 29, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- Aon plc (NYSE: AON), a leading global professional services firm, today released its 2025 Global Benefits Trends Study, which finds that multinational companies are under mounting pressure to offer personalized, inclusive benefits – yet most lack the governance, tools or frameworks to deliver at scale. The study, based on responses from more than 500 global benefits professionals across 45 countries and 16 industries, reveals that only 14 percent of multinationals have global guidelines in place to support personalization, while 65 percent of employees at multinationals would trade current benefits for more choice.

According to the study, cost management is the top priority for 70 percent of multinationals, with medical inflation cited as the key cost driver. But delivering employee value has surged to the forefront of the strategic agenda, now ranking among the top three objectives for benefits leaders. This disconnect underscores a new challenge for global benefits leaders: meeting rising employee expectations for flexibility while managing escalating costs. Seventy seven percent of survey respondents plan to negotiate their costs with existing benefits vendors and 67 percent plan to issue an RFP for benefits vendors.

"Employees increasingly expect a consumer-grade experience when it comes to their benefits – one that offers meaningful choice, creates innovative solutions and aligns with their individual needs," said Michael Pedel, head of global benefits at Aon. "Companies are moving in that direction and communicating their progress, but must also manage the realities of cost and complexity. The opportunity lies in designing programs that deliver both value and efficiency at scale."

Personalization and Inclusion: Expanding the Definition of Employee Value

Personalization increasingly incorporates inclusive benefits that address the diverse needs of today's workforce. Aon's study found that nearly two-thirds of leading companies (a select group of respondents with mature governance structures, integrated data strategies and executive-level alignment) plan to expand offerings focused on families (54 percent), aging (39 percent), gender (39 percent) and employees at lower income levels (39 percent). To balance these investments, 25 percent of survey recipients said they would reduce levels for benefits that are less valued by employees. These efforts reflect a broader shift: as employees seek consumer-grade experiences, they also expect benefits that align with their individual circumstances and values.

Personalized and inclusive benefits are also increasingly tied to wellbeing strategies, with 37 percent of companies actively considering initiatives that integrate health and work-life balance.

Overcoming Barriers to Personalization

While demand for personalized benefits is accelerating, most organizations face structural and operational challenges in scaling these offerings. While nearly half of companies have indicated that they already have a global benefits strategy, only 25 percent of global benefits leaders say their governance structure enables them to meet their objectives. By comparison, leading companies are three times more likely to have formal governance committees and twice as likely to centralize data and decision-making resulting in stronger alignment, cost savings and more stable benefits delivery. These top companies are also 67 percent more likely to have Global Benefits Centers of Excellence and three times more likely to have had their global benefits strategy and governance reviewed and endorsed by senior management, resulting in greater buy-in.

Technology, including artificial intelligence, presents a significant opportunity to deliver employee value while creating cost efficiencies. Leading companies are more than twice as likely to use tech to enable personalized experiences. However, only one in six benefits teams currently use AI to support benefits design or delivery. That figure is expected to nearly triple by 2027, but adoption is still limited by legacy systems, governance challenges and organizational readiness.

"This year's study confirms what many global benefits leaders already feel, expectations are rising, but the tools and governance structures to meet them haven't kept pace," said Pedel. "To deliver real value, organizations must think beyond cost containment. That means embracing personalization, investing in inclusive benefits, leveraging data and analytics, and using technology and governance as strategic enablers. The companies that do this well aren't just managing benefits, they're shaping the future of work."

About the Study

The 2025 Global Benefits Trends Study surveyed 518 global benefits professionals across 45 countries and 16 industries between January 27 and February 28, 2025. Read the full study here.

About Aon

Aon plc (NYSE: AON) exists to shape decisions for the better — to protect and enrich the lives of people around the world. Through actionable analytic insight, globally integrated Risk Capital and Human Capital expertise, and locally relevant solutions, our colleagues provide clients in over 120 countries with the clarity and confidence to make better risk and people decisions that protect and grow their businesses.

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Media Contact

mediainquiries@aon.com
Toll-free (U.S., Canada and Puerto Rico): +1 833 751 8114
International: +1 312 381 3024

 

** The press release content is from PR Newswire. Bastille Post is not involved in its creation. **

Companies Struggle to Meet Rising Demand for Personalized Benefits, Aon Survey Finds

Companies Struggle to Meet Rising Demand for Personalized Benefits, Aon Survey Finds

ALULA, Saudi Arabia, Jan. 16, 2026 /PRNewswire/ -- Today marks the official opening of Desert X AlUla 2026, the landmark fourth edition of the international, open-air biennial exhibition. Arts AlUla, in collaboration with Desert X, welcomes visitors to experience a stellar line-up of Saudi and international multi-generational artists whose site-responsive earthworks, sculptures, and installations will engage in a powerful dialogue with the awe-inspiring landscapes and layered heritage of AlUla.

 

 

As a premier destination rich in ancient history and breathtaking nature, AlUla, located in Northwest Saudi Arabia, solidifies its position on the global stage as a dynamic, emerging land art destination with Desert X AlUla, the region's first public art biennale, and a key highlight of the AlUla Arts Festival.

The 2026 edition of Desert X AlUla brings together 11 acclaimed artists whose diverse works reflect a wide spectrum of ideas, materials, and traditions. From monumental kinetic sculpture to sound-based explorations above and below ground, each commission is deeply rooted in relationships to AlUla's distinctive environment, further cementing Desert X AlUla's reputation as a globally significant platform for site-responsive land art.

Desert X AlUla runs until February 28, 2026, as a cornerstone of the annual AlUla Arts Festival. Curated by Wejdan Reda, Zoé Whitley, with artistic direction by Neville Wakefield, and Raneem Farsi, its fourth edition explores 'Space Without Measure.' Inspired by Kahlil Gibran, the theme fosters contemplation of imagination within AlUla's natural settings. The exhibition, set in the desert canyons of AlUla, serves as a pre-opening programme for Wadi AlFann, offering a pivotal glimpse into AlUla's plans to create a permanent land art 'Valley of the Arts.'

Hamad Alhomiedan, Director of Arts & Creative Industries at the Royal Commission for AlUla (RCU), said: "At Desert X AlUla 2026, audiences will engage with art that deeply converses with AlUla's unique landscapes and rich heritage. These compelling commissions highlight AlUla's dynamic transformation into a major global destination, where ancient and contemporary expressions converge. This exhibition is part of our broader revitalisation of AlUla as a culturally rich destination to live, work and visit and integral to positioning AlUla in the global dialogue of contemporary art and as a precursor to monumental projects like Wadi AlFann."

Participating artist/artworks are: 

  • Sara Abdu, A Kingdom Where No One Dies: Contours of Resonance
  • Mohammad Alfaraj, What was the Question Again?
  • Mohammed AlSaleem, The Thorn, AlShuruf Unit, The Triangles, Flower Bud, and Al Ahilla (courtesy of Royal Commission for Riyadh City)
  • Tarek Atoui, The Water Song
  • Bahraini-Danish, Bloom 
  • Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Imole Red 
  • Agnes Denes, The Living Pyramid
  • Ibrahim El-Salahi, Haraza Tree
  • Basmah Felemban, Murmur of Pebbles
  • Vibha Galhotra, Future Fables
  • Héctor Zamora, Tar HyPar

For further information, please contact:
Sabrine.Shaw@bursonglobal.com
AlUlaArtsFestival@bursonglobal.com 

Multimedia gallery:
High-resolution photos of all 11 artists and their artworks can be found here.

About AlUla and Arts AlUla

Located 1,100 km from Riyadh, in North-West Saudi Arabia, AlUla is a place of extraordinary natural and human heritage. The vast area, covering 22,561km², includes a lush oasis valley, towering sandstone mountains and ancient cultural heritage sites dating back thousands of years to when the Lihyan and Nabataean kingdoms reigned.

The most well-known and recognised site in AlUla is Hegra, the principal southern city of the Nabataean Kingdom and Saudi Arabia's first UNESCO World Heritage Site. AlUla is also home to ancient Dadan, the capital of the Dadan and Lihyan Kingdoms and considered to be one of the most developed 1st millennium BCE cities of the Arabian Peninsula, and Jabal Ikmah, an open air library of hundreds of inscriptions and writings in many different languages. AlUla Old Town Village, a labyrinth of more than 900 mudbrick homes was developed from at least the 12th century and has been revitalised as the vibrant hub for visitors and residents.

The creation of Arts AlUla within The Royal Commission for AlUla (RCU) is a commitment to crafting the next chapters in a millennia of artistic creation – celebrating cultural inheritance and shaping a future inspired by artists built be artists. The work of Arts AlUla seeks to preserve this legacy: fuse the old with the new; the local with the international, keeping the arts central to the spirit of AlUla as a place of extraordinary natural and human heritage.

Wadi AlFann, meaning 'Valley of the Arts,' will be a global cultural destination for land art, unveiling from 2028 onwards, where era-defining works by artists from around the world will be permanently sited in the monumental landscape of AlUla, the extraordinary desert region of north-west Saudi Arabia.

** The press release content is from PR Newswire. Bastille Post is not involved in its creation. **

Desert X AlUla 2026: monumental land art exhibition opens in the ancient oasis of AlUla

Desert X AlUla 2026: monumental land art exhibition opens in the ancient oasis of AlUla

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