2008 Winning Strategies: AARP Best Employers for Workers Over 50
Source: AARP.org | September 2008
- Caregiving Benefits: 2008 AARP Best Employers For Workers Over 50
- Phased Retirement: 2008 AARP Best Employers For Workers Over 50
- Recruiting Practices: 2008 AARP Best Employers For Workers Over 50
- Retiree Relations: 2008 AARP Best Employers For Workers Over 50
- Training Initiatives: 2008 AARP Best Employers For Workers Over 50
- 2007 Winning Strategies: AARP Best Employers for Workers Over 50
- Ensuring that recruiting materials are designed to reflect broad diversity, including mature workers
- Developing specific alumni programs designed to attract mature and retired workers to mentor and train younger employees
- Highlighting phrases, such as “Retirees welcome,” in recruiting efforts
- Partnering with efforts like those of RetirementJobs.com and Operation A.B.L.E. (Ability Based on Long Experience) to recruit mature workers
- Tapping into community resources, such as senior groups, to recruit for part-time or temporary employment opportunities
- Maintaining a database of retirees who are interested in returning to work on a part-time basis
- Financial planning and investment-education programs to help workers build retirement income
- Computer skills programs, including programs targeted specifically for workers age 50+
- Retirement planning and education workshops to prepare workers for their eventual retirement
- Refresher courses for mature workers who are reentering the workforce after being away for a number of years
- Assigning mature workers to train others by using them as “expert” teachers and mentors
- Tuition reimbursement programs, including reimbursement for pre-retirement training programs
- Allowing employees to move from full-time to part-time employment as a bridge to retirement
- Implementing flexible-work schedules and job-sharing programs as ways to ease pre-retirees into retirement.
- Developing “work-to-retire” programs, which move employees toward retirement over a phased-in period that can take up to three years.
- Allowing employees to retire and return to work for special assignments or projects
- Allowing retirees who return to work to collect their pensions
- Letting employees test the retirement waters by allowing them to try it and to return to full-time employment if they determine their retirement decisions were premature
Alumni programs, retiree associations, and retiree newsletters that keep retirees abreast of current developments concerning their former employers
- Active promotion of volunteer opportunities to retirees
- Rosters of retirees who can be contacted for special work assignments
- Invitations to ongoing employer activities, such as benefit fairs, flu-shot clinics, and awards luncheons
- Continued access to company stores and fitness centers
- Keeping retirees up-to-date on business issues through continued access to the company Web site
- Formal retiree-relations programs to stay connected, thereby enabling companies to benefit from the intellectual capital that resides within their retiree populations
- Paid and unpaid time off to care for family members
- Education on eldercare issues, such as workshops and seminars
- Caregiver-support programs to secure daycare for aging parents or other family members
- Subsidized backup child and eldercare programs for times when ongoing arrangements fall through


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