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Live Conference Recap BY Katie Chambers | May 20, 2026

Designing an Employee Experience That Engages, Recognizes, and Supports

How do you build a culture of care at a construction site? It’s all about perspective. “We’re one of the most inclusive industries in the world because it takes 300 skill sets to put together a project any day of the week,” said Kabri Lehrman-Schmid, project superintendent, SeaTac construction leader, at Hensel Phelps. Taking care of a crew’s needs can mean anything from setting up a coffee station to applying for parking permits for them with the city. It’s all about paying attention to employees’ unique needs, and responding accordingly. A great employee experience considers all facets of a worker, from well-being and compensation to recognition and growth. Creating an environment where employees feel genuinely engaged and supported throughout their development was the focus of a panel discussion among leaders including Lehrman-Schmid at From Day One’s Seattle conference.Today’s Workplace TrendsPost-pandemic, many organizations are leaning into what Maris Krieger, senior director, talent, learning and development, at Hearst Corporation, calls a “culture of care,” It’s all about doubling down on providing additional healthcare and childcare benefits as well as learning opportunities. “We are a global company, a very diverse portfolio company, so we are continuously working to make this experience that we have feel connected and shared across the globe,” she said.As many workers return to the office, they are again spending “10 to 15% of employee time commuting,” said Chinmay Malaviya, co-founder and CEO of Ridepanda. “Post-pandemic, more people now acknowledge and recognize this as a painful, stressful, anxiety-inducing time. Employees are expecting different things,” he said. Malaviya identifies this as an opportunity to provide solutions that ease the strain and help employees make the most of their time, such as in-office wellness activities to preserve their free time or carpool options to improve affordability. Ridepanda works with employers to rethink commuting as part of the overall employee experience rather than just a logistical necessity, says Malaviya. By working to address the daily frustrations tied to commuting, it aims to support employee well-being while also helping companies strengthen workplace satisfaction.Due to remote work options, many large corporations are now finding their employees scattered across different locations. At Hensel Phelps, says Lehrman-Schmid, employees already felt this way, given the nature of the company’s work spread across many individual job sites. It’s HR’s role to bring everyone together, despite the physical distance. “I’m in that position as a job site leader, to be able to take the great initiatives we’re doing at a corporate level and actually make it applicable to the production-oriented systems that we have in very dynamic projects that could be high rises, that could be tunnels, and make it applicable to our people in the work that they do daily.”Where Culture and Benefits Intersect Katie Bunker, VP, HR, North America at Cotiviti, said leaders should be “very deliberate about the employee experience. It’s like culture. If you don’t look after it, it just happens.” This means understanding the experience of stakeholders at the organizational, managerial, and individual levels. “We set out to define what we wanted the employee experience to be like. What does it mean to work here, and what does it mean to experience it? What’s our mission?” Bunker said. These should guide every touchpoint, from first applying for a job through retirement. Her team relies on employee engagement surveys to gauge whether their strategies are working, and they just closed one with a 91% response rate. “That’s because you created a culture where they feel like their opinion matters,” said moderator Diana Opong, independent reporter and host. Panelists spoke about "Designing an Employee Experience That Engages, Recognizes, and Supports"At Hearst, Krieger said, “We have shared culture, we have shared principles, but we still need to give flexibility to different organizations.” For example, their New York office is now mostly in-person with some hybrid options, while the Seattle office skews more remote, especially for tech workers who were initially hired to work exclusively remotely during the pandemic. To keep those folks engaged, the company has one week per month with in-person collaboration events. When it comes to AI, organizations should focus on educating employees while also allaying their fears. Krieger’s company asked staff “AI champions” to opt in and help educate their peers while emphasizing the human element of using the technology, “the critical thinking, the judgment, even delegation. We are really trying to make it non-threatening,” she said.  Hensel Phelps is using AI to augment and improve existing processes, such as using an app called “Smart Tag It” to identify hazards associated with each day’s tasks. “This is a process that has existed forever, but in taking AI to it, not only are we providing education to teams [and] to leaders that traditionally have not received education in technology, but we are also providing feedback on, ‘Was that an interactive session? What questions can you ask your crew to make sure that they better understand this situation?’ It’s building these collaborative skillsets in positions that have not traditionally had that opportunity,” Lehrman-Schmid said. While Krieger has seen how AI has put some areas of her organization’s business, including social media, “under attack,” it’s also provided more human opportunities as employees continue to upskill in new technologies. “We have been doing more things in collaboration across the organization, I feel that it has even strengthened human collaboration. We haven’t switched to tools and machines and robots and AI, but human collaboration comes very naturally [in] that different functions and teams are coming together and trying to solve a problem.” As HR teams look to amp up the employee experience, Bunker encourages them to approach it from a business perspective rather than an HR one, especially when seeking buy-in from leadership. “So, it’s not a ‘me versus you,’ [instead] it’s a data set.” Be prepared to share the hard numbers demonstrating the financial and business benefits of investing in employees’ well-being. The people should always be the priority. “My grandmother used to say, ‘You spend five days out of every seven at work, so you better like what you’re doing and you better like who you’re doing it with,” Bunker said. “And I think in the roles that we have, we’re stewards of that, and we can really influence that. So, we try to be very intentional about that.”Katie Chambers is a freelance writer and award-winning communications executive with a lifelong commitment to supporting artists and advocating for inclusion. Her work has been seen in HuffPost, Top Think, and several printed essay collections, and she has appeared on Cheddar News, iWomanTV, On New Jersey, and CBS New York.(Photos by Josh Larson for From Day One)

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Virtual Conference Recap BY Grace Turney | May 15, 2026

Delivering Large-Scale Frontline Workforce Development

From the vast warehouse to the loud machinery, the first day inside a Humana pharmacy dispensing site can be jarring. Workers who walk in expecting something quieter and more clinical may feel shocked. “You don’t want the first time they see the inside of a dispensing site to be the first day on the job,” said Laura Bartus, head of learning at CenterWell Pharmacy, a division of Humana. That moment of surprise, she says, is a fully preventable failure of recruitment.Bartus joined moderator Megan Ulu-Lani Boyanton, a business reporter for the Seattle Times, for a fireside chat closing out From Day One’s May virtual conference. The conversation covered how learning and development (L&D) can drive both recruitment and retention, what it takes to earn organizational buy-in for training programs, and how large companies like Humana can preserve human connection across sprawling teams.Closing the Preview Gap“Job shock is real,” Bartus said, describing the moment new hires realize a role is harder or different than advertised. Her solution is straightforward: show candidates what the job actually looks like before they accept it. Humana’s pharmacy team now offers virtual tours of dispensing sites during the interview process, walking candidates through the physical environment, daily workflows, and the path a prescription takes through the system. Clinic teams are building similar previews for front-office staff.The goal isn’t to screen people out; it’s to let them opt in with full information. “I want them to realize that when they’re interviewing,” she said. Candidates who self-select based on an honest picture are more likely to stay.Retention, Bartus noted, is just as much about trajectory as transparency. Pay matters, and frontline workers are rarely compensated generously. But so does the sense that a current role leads somewhere. Replacing an employee can cost an organization $10,000 to $15,000 when recruiter time, posting fees, and leadership hours are factored in. The math makes career pathing a business imperative, not just a cultural nicety.Laura Bartus of Humana spoke with moderator Megan Ulu-Lani Boytanton of the Seattle Times (photo by From Day One)“Where you want to go is not divorced from where you are now,” she said. A call center agent, for example, is developing empathy, active listening, negotiation, and de-escalation skills daily. Those translate directly to sales, team leadership, and beyond. Bartus’s job, as she sees it, is to help employees see those connections and build a bridge.Winning Stakeholder Buy-InEven the best-designed learning initiative can fail without the right support. Bartus is direct about what separates programs that succeed from those that quietly disappear: senior leader investment. Not passive approval, but active championship.“If the senior leader over that area isn’t personally invested and doesn’t own it, that program is always going to fail,” she said. Her approach when launching something new is to secure that alignment before building momentum. She seeks a seat at executive leadership meetings, shares what’s being proposed and why, and makes the value explicit. “If you don’t show them the value of what you’re building, they’re not going to buy in.”She frames L&D not as a service function waiting to be funded, but as a strategic partner that earns credibility by speaking the language of outcomes. Learning leaders who want organizational support, she said, have to go get it proactively and in person.Building a Team That Talks to ItselfBartus leads a team of 67, and collaboration across that group doesn’t happen by accident. A few years ago, facilitation, design, operations, and product functions operated largely in isolation. The resulting training was fine, but it reflected the siloed thinking that produced it.Her fix was structural: a pod model that pulls people from different roles into biweekly working groups organized around a specific learning audience. Designers, facilitators, education leads, operations partners, and product partners now share a room and a common goal. The training they build together is more coherent because everyone is solving for the same end user.The social byproducts matter too. “They develop their own in-jokes and their own subculture,” Bartus said. “They champion each other and they cheer each other on.” At all-team meetings, the clinic side of her organization dedicates time to kudos—peers publicly recognizing each other’s contributions in front of the full group. In an environment where raises aren’t always possible and bonuses depend on the fiscal year, recognition becomes its own form of compensation.“We can always recognize the people around us for doing great work,” she said. “We can make them feel appreciated, and we can show them: your work is important to our success.”Cross-Training as a Competitive SkillThe same flexibility Bartus builds into her team culture applies to her staffing model. When facilitation demand drops and design work spikes, she doesn’t wait. Facilitators on her team have been cross-trained as designers, allowing her to redirect capacity without disruption.That model showed its value when Humana’s contracts with telehealth providers expanded GLP-1 offerings and the volume of related patient calls increased. Operations staff stepped up to handle the new call load, learning what the medications are, how coverage rules work, and what patients need to know. “People have been really wonderful about flexing new skills,” Bartus said. She credits strong frontline leadership for creating an environment where employees raise their hands for new challenges rather than waiting to be assigned.The throughline connecting all of it, recruitment honesty, stakeholder alignment, team cohesion, adaptive staffing, is permission. Permission to fail in training before the stakes are real, to grow in a direction that wasn’t on the original job description, and to be seen, recognized, and valued for work that often goes unnoticed. “We need to give them practice,” Bartus said, “and we need to give them space to fail while they’re with us.”Grace Turney is a St. Louis-based writer, artist, and former librarian. See more of her work at graceturney17.wixsite.com/mysite.(Photo by nortonrsx/iStock)

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What Our Attendees are Saying

Jordan Baker(Attendee) profile picture

“The panels were phenomenal. The breakout sessions were incredibly insightful. I got the opportunity to speak with countless HR leaders who are dedicated to improving people’s lives. I walked away feeling excited about my own future in the business world, knowing that many of today’s people leaders are striving for a more diverse, engaged, and inclusive workforce.”

– Jordan Baker, Emplify
Desiree Booker(Attendee) profile picture

“Thank you, From Day One, for such an important conversation on diversity and inclusion, employee engagement and social impact.”

– Desiree Booker, ColorVizion Lab
Kim Vu(Attendee) profile picture

“Timely and much needed convo about the importance of removing the stigma and providing accessible mental health resources for all employees.”

– Kim Vu, Remitly
Florangela Davila(Attendee) profile picture

“Great discussion about leadership, accountability, transparency and equity. Thanks for having me, From Day One.”

– Florangela Davila, KNKX 88.5 FM
Cory Hewett(Attendee) profile picture

“De-stigmatizing mental health illnesses, engaging stakeholders, arriving at mutually defined definitions for equity, and preventing burnout—these are important topics that I’m delighted are being discussed at the From Day One conference.”

– Cory Hewett, Gimme Vending Inc.
Trisha Stezzi(Attendee) profile picture

“Thank you for bringing speakers and influencers into one space so we can all continue our work scaling up the impact we make in our organizations and in the world!”

– Trisha Stezzi, Significance LLC
Vivian Greentree(Attendee) profile picture

“From Day One provided a full day of phenomenal learning opportunities and best practices in creating & nurturing corporate values while building purposeful relationships with employees, clients, & communities.”

– Vivian Greentree, Fiserv
Chip Maxwell(Attendee) profile picture

“We always enjoy and are impressed by your events, and this was no exception.”

– Chip Maxwell, Emplify
Katy Romero(Attendee) profile picture

“We really enjoyed the event yesterday— such an engaged group of attendees and the content was excellent. I'm feeling great about our decision to partner with FD1 this year.”

– Katy Romero, One Medical
Kayleen Perkins(Attendee) profile picture

“The From Day One Conference in Seattle was filled with people who want to make a positive impact in their company, and build an inclusive culture around diversity and inclusion. Thank you to all the panelists and speakers for sharing their expertise and insights. I'm looking forward to next year's event!”

– Kayleen Perkins, Seattle Children's
Michaela Ayers(Attendee) profile picture

“I had the pleasure of attending From Day One. My favorite session, Getting Bias Out of Our Systems, was such a powerful conversation between local thought leaders.”

– Michaela Ayers, Nourish Events
Sarah J. Rodehorst(Attendee) profile picture

“Inspiring speakers and powerful conversations. Loved meeting so many talented people driving change in their organizations. Thank you From Day One! I look forward to next year’s event!”

– Sarah J. Rodehorst, ePerkz
Angela Prater(Attendee) profile picture

“I had the distinct pleasure of attending From Day One Seattle. The Getting Bias Out of Our Systems discussion was inspirational and eye-opening.”

– Angela Prater, Confluence Health
Joel Stupka(Attendee) profile picture

“From Day One did an amazing job of providing an exceptional experience for both the attendees and vendors. I mean, we had whale sharks and giant manta rays gracefully swimming by on the other side of the hall from our booth!”

– Joel Stupka, SkillCycle
Alexis Hauk(Attendee) profile picture

“Last week I had the honor of moderating a panel on healthy work environments at the From Day One conference in Atlanta. I was so inspired by what these experts had to say about the timely and important topics of mental health in the workplace and the value of nurturing a culture of psychological safety.”

– Alexis Hauk, Emory University