Bloomberg: Wall Street Wellness Programs Are Being Used to Drive Sales

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by Sunday, April 30, 2017 22:00:07 Updated on Monday, May 01, 2017 05:33:33

When Lance Hulack calls his first client on Monday morning, they spend 15 minutes talking about their fitness trackers. “I’ll say, ‘Hey, I saw you crushed it on Saturday! 25k steps,’” Hulack, the director of corporate sales at ING Group, says. “Then we talk about what we need to do workwise: ‘What are you looking to hedge? What levels are you looking at?’ It’s a really good icebreaker rather than talking business all the time.” Hulack is an enthusiastic participant in ING’s new corporate wellness program. For the last few weeks, he has diligently worn a company-issued TomTom that logs his exercise, body composition, and sleep. Each morning, he signs into the Dacadoo app connected to the tracker, punching in what he had for breakfast and answering a few questions about his feelings. This kind of health awareness is clearly good for Hulack and certainly not new to the corporate landscape. What’s new is that he’s also persuading his clients to do the same. Most companies use wellness programs to lower health insurance costs; ING wants employees to get healthy in a bid to drive sales. Not only do 350 members of the sales team obsessively track their fitness, the financial company has signed up 35 clients to participate, too. The idea isn’t just that healthier employees will perform better, but that wellness can build customer loyalty, too.

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