The Manager Effect: Why Most Employees Feel No Change in Work-Life Balance

 

 

Key Takeaways 

  1. Work-life balance outcomes are increasingly shaped by manager behaviour, not policy, explaining why many employees feel little day-to-day change despite employer investment in wellbeing.
  1. Employee benefits lose effectiveness when managers lack the tools or clarity to support balance in practice, limiting access and increasing burnout risk.
  1. Aligning benefits design with manager capability and workload realities is now essential for improving both employee experience and program sustainability.

 

Why Work-Life Balance Feels Stuck 

Recent data from TELUS Health shows that 65% of Canadian workers say their manager’s support for work-life balance hasn’t changed over the past year. While nearly a quarter report improvement, a notable portion say support has actually declined. 

This pattern reveals an important truth: while organizations have introduced flexible work models, wellbeing initiatives, and expanded benefits, the employee experience of balance remains largely unchanged for most people. 

The reason is less about intent and more about execution. 

 

Managers Are Where Work-Life Balance Is Lived 

 

Work-life balance is not defined in a policy document. It is experienced in: 

  • how work is assigned and prioritized 
  • how time off is respected 
  • how flexibility is interpreted in practice 
  • how psychological safety is modelled day to day 

Managers sit at the intersection of organizational expectations and employee realities. When expectations are unclear or conflicting, managers often default to maintaining output, even when wellbeing is a stated priority. 

This is where the “manager effect” becomes visible. 

 

Why Benefits Alone Can’t Shift the Experience 

Many employers have invested in: 

  • mental health benefits 
  • flexible work policies 
  • expanded paid time off 
  • wellness programs and EAPs 

Yet employees still hesitate to use these supports when: 

  • workloads remain unchanged 
  • time off feels discouraged or risky 
  • flexibility exists on paper but not in practice 

In these environments, benefits technically exist but are functionally inaccessible. This disconnect explains why benefit utilization does not always correlate with improved wellbeing outcomes. 

 

Work-Life Balance as a Benefits Access Issue 

From a benefits perspective, manager behaviour directly influences: 

  • whether employees feel safe using time off 
  • whether flexible work options are respected 
  • whether mental health supports are accessed early or late 
  • whether burnout escalates into absence or disability 

When managers lack guidance, training, or authority to support balance, benefits become reactive tools rather than preventive ones. Over time, this drives higher costs, longer absences, and lower engagement. 

 

Why Some Teams Are Improving 

The data also shows that 24% of employees report improved manager support. This group matters because it demonstrates that change is possible. 

Organizations seeing improvement often: 

  • equip managers with clearer expectations around workload and availability 
  • align performance goals with realistic capacity 
  • integrate benefits education into manager conversations 
  • reinforce that using benefits is supported, not penalized 

In these environments, benefits work as intended because manager behaviour reinforces access. 

 

What Employers Should Be Re-Evaluating 

To improve work-life balance outcomes, employers need to ask: 

  • Are managers equipped to support balance, or simply expected to? 
  • Do benefits and flexibility policies align with workload realities? 
  • Are managers clear on how benefits fit into performance and absence management? 
  • Where does access break down, even when programs exist? 

Answering these questions requires viewing work-life balance through both an operational and benefits lens. 

 

The Role of Strategic Benefits Consulting 

This is where employee benefits consulting adds value beyond plan design. 

A strategic consulting approach helps organizations: 

  • understand how benefits are actually experienced across teams 
  • identify where manager behaviour limits access or effectiveness 
  • align benefits, mental health support, and absence strategies 
  • support managers with clearer guidance and decision frameworks 

Rather than adding more programs, consulting focuses on making existing investments work better. 

 

How Benchmark Benefits Can Support Employers 

 

At Benchmark Benefits, we work with organizations across Canada to align benefits strategy with how work actually happens. 

Our team helps employers: 

  • assess gaps between benefits design and employee experience 
  • integrate mental health, flexibility, and absence strategies 
  • support managers with clear, practical guidance 
  • ensure benefits investments deliver real impact on wellbeing and sustainability 

Work-life balance is not solved by policy alone. It is shaped daily by managers—and supported, or undermined, by how benefits are designed and governed. 

 

Contact us today!

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