Employees usually start disengaging long before they officially quit. Sometimes it’s burnout or management concerns, but more often in 2026 it’s benefits.
Rising healthcare costs, financial pressures, mental health issues, and work-life balance are changing employees’ expectations from an employer. This year alone, healthcare costs are predicted to increase by 5%–9%, which means workers are paying closer attention to what firms genuinely offer beyond income.
That transition is posing a big problem for emerging businesses. Recent workforce studies reveal that over 40% of employees would leave for a better benefits package, and that replacing an employee can cost as much as 150% of their compensation.
Many small and mid-sized firms want to do more, but just don’t have the buying power or the internal HR personnel to make it happen efficiently. That’s where a Professional Employer Organization or PEO may flip the equation.
Businesses frequently consider retention first when they think about wages. “But employees increasingly expect a full experience around support, healthcare, flexibility, and long-term security.”
This is why the discourse about employees quitting their employers is now so much about benefits.
Employees notice when:
These frustrations build up over time. Your company begins to be compared to other companies with superior support systems and a more professional HR experience.
This makes a hard cycle for small enterprises. Limited benefits make hiring harder. Higher turnover increases costs. Rising costs make benefits even harder to improve.
Firms with greater HR infrastructure also report higher morale, decreased absenteeism, and higher productivity.
Employees are more likely to stay when they feel:
In contrast, businesses with weak or inconsistent benefits often struggle with:
It’s expensive to replace personnel. Turnover can easily cost 30% to 200% of an employee’s income (depending on the function) between recruiting, onboarding, training, lost productivity, and overtime compensation.
The vast majority of small businesses want to do the right thing by their employees. The problem is size. Big companies negotiate health insurance with thousands of employees behind them. Small enterprises bargain individually. This often results in:
At the same time, the HR duties keep rising. Time is consumed by benefits administration, payroll deductions, compliance updates, onboarding, open enrollment, leave policy, and employee communication.
For growing companies, it becomes too much to handle themselves. That’s when many organizations begin to explore PEO employee benefits options.
A PEO is a corporation that provides a comprehensive suite of HR outsourcing services to businesses, while allowing business owners to maintain control of their business operations and culture.
A PEO typically handles:
More crucially, a PEO aggregates employees from multiple businesses to form larger insurance groupings. That gives you more leverage and access to enterprise-level benefits small companies normally can’t get on their own. This becomes a big plus for firms when considering employee retention measures.
With stronger group buying power, businesses can often offer:
This greatly boosts the entire benefits package for employees without causing employers to swallow large increases in costs.
Employees pick up on this quickly. When the benefits are better, people become more confident in the organization and more satisfied overall in the workplace.
Modern PEOs also help businesses strengthen:
Many employees depart because work seems unorganized, inconsistent, or unsupported. Robust HR systems add consistency and professionalism that employees appreciate far more than most business owners recognize.
Managing benefits internally is becoming increasingly complex in 2026.
Businesses are dealing with:
The administrative burden alone is overwhelming for many business owners.
This is where outsourced employee benefits management delivers genuine operational value. Instead of wasting hours a week fixing HR issues, leadership gets organized procedures and skilled help that grows with the organization.
That allows managers and executives to focus on:
Instead of constantly reacting to HR issues.
There are clear signals when it starts to make financial and operational sense to use external HR support.
You may benefit from a PEO if:
For many companies with 10 to 250 employees, collaborating with a PEO is one of the fastest ways to boost retention and simplify operations.
PEOs are evolving from compliance partners to growth partners for SMBs.
Industry data shows:
The reason is simple. Companies are finding that there’s a common thread to retention, compliance, perks, and employee experience.
OEM America helps firms with fewer than 500 workers build better employee experiences with practical HR support and competitive benefits solutions. Enterprise-grade programs, simpler administration, and hands-on assistance allow firms to boost retention without introducing excessive complexity or overhead.
If you’re battling with turnover, rising benefit expenses, or bogged down with HR administration, it may be time to seek a better solution. OEM America is a proud member of NAPEO and a BBB Accredited Business, trusted to provide advice to firms seeking to boost retention and reclaim important time.
To learn more, call 860.528.5555 or request a consultation.
A: Small firms are at a structural disadvantage in benefits purchasing because they simply don’t have the size to negotiate good pricing with insurance carriers. That frequently means they have more limited offerings at a higher cost than what larger firms can provide, which can lead to churn when employees see the difference.
A: PEO employee benefits are the health, dental, vision, and ancillary benefits, and retirement benefits that a small business can get through a co-employment arrangement with a Professional Employer Organization. Because a PEO draws workers from numerous client companies, it may obtain enterprise-level coverage at costs that would be unavailable to a small business on its own. Benefits packages often include comprehensive medical plans, FSAs and HSAs, voluntary additional coverage, Employee Assistance Programs, and access to retirement plans.
A: The best retention strategies for small and midsize enterprises combine competitive incentives with consistent, well-managed HR processes. Addressing the fundamental reasons employees leave through robust healthcare coverage, mental health support, retirement options, and financial wellness tools.
A: A PEO will manage the entire administrative process of benefits administration from annual plan renewals to carrier negotiations, plan comparisons, open enrollment coordination, and payroll deduction accuracy. This takes a major operational burden off of business owners and HR professionals, while at the same time boosting the quality and affordability of the benefits being offered to employees.