BUSINESS

Tech companies shower employees with perks

Patrick May | San Jose (Calif.) Mercury News
South Bend Tribune

SAN JOSE, Calif. — The Perk Wars are raging across our nation.

With cutthroat competition for talent and a sizzling job market in Silicon Valley and beyond, tech companies are seeking to attract and retain employees by pretty much spoiling them rotten.

The valley has always been a fertile breeding ground for workplace goodies, championed famously by Google with its gourmet cafeterias and on-site massage rooms. But in these talent-hungry times, Google seems almost stodgy compared with startups like crowdfunding platform Tilt in San Francisco, where employees after a year on the job get a free plane ticket anywhere in the world. Or real-estate giant Zillow, which offers free overnight shipping of breast milk from nursing moms on business trips to their homes. Or even software behemoth Salesforce, which recently held a “Miracle of Mindfulness Day” where experts in higher consciousness equipped “employees with mindful tips to help them through their work day.”

Millennials, especially, are getting a ton of “bennies,” thanks in part to all the startups whose mission is to deliver cool perks for other startups. Executives at Blueboard, which helps GoPro and others reward their employees with mind-blowing experiences, are seeing explosive growth as they race to cater to the millennial’s every inner-dream.

“Companies are realizing that millennials really care about perks,” says co-founder Kevin Yip. “And they’re looking for more and more ways to keep employees excited and to keep them from leaving the company for another.”

With its mantra that “cash is quiet” and its belief that employees prefer experiential benefits more than financial ones, Blueboard provides perks for clients like lessons in stand-up comedy or the chance to be James Bond for a day, complete with rented tux, a sky-dive and lessons in making the perfect martini.

These days, benefits other than the traditional health care insurance and retirement plans are all over the map. Business management startup Domo gives pregnant employees $2,000 for maternity clothing. Employees at Credit Karma in San Francisco can relax during breaks in the company’s jam room, complete with soundproofing, drums, amplifiers and guitars. Other perks are, well, pint-size: millennial stock-trading firm Robinhood has its liquid cheese machine. And Rational Interaction, a digital production studio, offers “Breakfast Sandwich Wednesdays” wherein the perk team “scours Seattle for the best new breakfast sandwich, then brings in enough for the whole team.”

Meg Virick, a business professor at San Jose State University, said the push to offer ever-perkier perks by the corporate world sometimes reflects a larger reality.

“Companies are trying to outdo each other with these perks,” she said, because wages, at least nationally, haven’t risen dramatically. “So these perks are taking up a bigger and bigger chunk of the total compensation offered to employees.”

Part of the attraction to employers, she said, is that “they’re revocable if the company gets into a financially tight spot; you can offer yoga classes one day and stop them tomorrow, which gives the employer much more flexibility in their offerings. You can’t do that with wage and salary structures, which are much more difficult to change.”

And so the perks factory keeps cranking out new ways to seduce, thank and honor employees, sometimes taking a legacy freebie like complimentary meals at the office and fine-tuning it. Tilt not only provides free lunch and dinner to its staff, said environmental specialist Sarah Kalamchi, but also offers “religious meals including halal meats, as well as vegetarian, gluten-free, vegan and Paleo options.”

And Paleo-fueled Tiltonians, as staffers call themselves, can then partake in another perk called Gratitude Day, a once-a-year option to receive $250 and a day off to go thank someone “in our lives,” said Kalamchi, “who’s really helped us along the way,” whether it’s a teacher, a parent or even a neighbor.

Product manager Conor Farese says he’ll use his Gratitude Day to do something nice for a woman “who was like a second mother to me growing up. I’ll probably take her to a nice restaurant, someplace she’d never be able to afford.”

He says these do-good benefits make him proud to work at Tilt. “Perks like this definitely caught my attention when I applied for the job. So many perks, like free lunches, are focused on keeping you at work as long as possible,” Farese said. “But things like Gratitude Day are a clear commitment from Tilt to the external community, a way to thank and appreciate people out there for making Tilt employees who they are.”

This sort of “pay it forward” perk is becoming an increasingly popular category of workplace morale booster. Facebook and Apple offer their female employees an option of freezing their eggs. Peer-to-peer dog-sitting startup Rover in Seattle “offers three comp days bereavement leave to Rover employees for the passing of their beloved pet.” And a Silicon Valley company called Thync will dispatch its Vibe Squad to your workplace to attach a wearable device to your employee’s head, creating an “Energy Vibe to get through the afternoon slump or a Calm Vibe before a big meeting.”’

Tilt: Free plane ticket anywhere in the world after a year on the job.

Zillow: Free overnight shipping home of breast milk from nursing moms on business trips.

Salesforce: An on-site “Miracle of Mindfulness Day” where experts share with employees “mindful tips to help them through their work day.”

Domo: Pregnant employees can get $2,000 for maternity clothing.

Credit Karma: A workplace “jam room,” complete with soundproofing, drums, amplifiers and guitars.

Robinhood: A liquid cheese machine.

Rational Interaction: “Breakfast Sandwich Wednesdays” — the perk team “scours Seattle for the best new breakfast sandwich, then brings in enough for the whole team.”

Sindeo Mortgage: Help getting low-cost home loans with deeply discounted fees.

Staples: Vampire-themed games to get employees excited about money-management and investing in a 401(k).

Pacific Market Research: Financial skills training, including classroom instruction on how to deal with debt collectors.

Filld: Discounts on fuel and sometimes free gasoline.

Zipongo: Free dietary assessment of employees’ nutritional levels and a personalized meal plan.

Facebook, Apple: Female employees have an option of freezing their eggs.

Rover: Three comp days bereavement leave to employees for the passing of their pet.

—Source: Mercury News reporting

Chis Carrente, left, plays bass with his Credit Karma colleagues Praj Pradhan, center, and Helen Deng in a Jam Room at the credit-help startup on Nov. 17 in San Francisco. Bay Area News Group/KARL MONDON