A Rs 10,000 disappears with alarming speed in urban India: transport, meals, utilities, occasional entertainment. For a 25-year-old software engineer earning Rs 8 lakh annually—a salary that would have seemed comfortable a decade ago—financial security remains elusive. Despite competitive packages, many young professionals report minimal savings, carry student debt, and feel perpetually anxious about money.
Kapil Udaiwal, CHRO, Ageas Federal Life Insurance, observed something unexpected amongst his employees: “They weren’t asking for more money. They were asking for guidance on managing what they already earned.” This disconnect between earning well and living precariously has forced a fundamental reckoning in Indian corporate corridors about HR’s role in employee financial health.
The vulnerability is particularly acute in India, where social safety nets remain inadequate. “In the US or Europe, if you lose your job, there is at least some basic support from the government to cover essential expenses,” explains Ravi Mishra, head-HR, BITS Pilani. “In India, nothing of this sort exists. The middle class, already weighed down by loans for homes, cars or education, becomes extremely vulnerable when jobs are lost.”
Transient rewards, persistent problems
The traditional HR playbook relies heavily on monetary incentives: year-end bonuses, festive gifts, performance payouts. These gestures produce gratitude—briefly. But they do little to address the structural financial fragility affecting even well-compensated employees.
Mishra has witnessed the devastating consequences firsthand—families unable to service debt following job losses, sometimes leading to tragic outcomes. The middle class’s financial precariousness isn’t merely an abstract policy concern; it directly affects workplace performance, mental health, and retention.
“In India, nothing of this sort exists. The middle class, already weighed down by loans for homes, cars or education, becomes extremely vulnerable when jobs are lost.”
Ravi Mishra, head-HR, BITS Pilani
This challenge intersects with another disturbing trend: health crises increasingly affecting younger workers. Cardiac arrests and cancer diagnoses amongst people in their twenties are no longer rare, and treatment costs can prove catastrophic without adequate insurance and emergency funds. Yet most employees lack the financial literacy to navigate these risks effectively.
Even basic concepts confuse many professionals. Understanding salary slips, decoding deductions, grasping the long-term value of stock options—these fundamentals often remain mysterious to entry-level employees. The knowledge gap extends further: how to build emergency funds, when to purchase insurance, how compound interest works, where to invest for different life goals.
Until recently, most organisations lacked infrastructure to deliver financial education at scale. One-off workshops with external consultants proved expensive and reached limited audiences. The question became: could HR departments, traditionally focused on payroll and compliance, evolve into architects of financial resilience?
Digital democratisation
The breakthrough came with technology. Digital financial wellness platforms began offering what traditional methods couldn’t: personalised, on-demand guidance accessible to entire workforces without proportional cost increases.
Udaiwal notes that “employees are seeking guidance on how to manage their money, not just more money. That is where HR can create real impact—by building literacy, offering tools, and making financial planning part of the overall employee experience.”
“The role of HR goes beyond payouts—it’s about enabling employees to build financial resilience. Programmes centred on financial literacy, financial planning and overall wellness are becoming part of the employee value proposition. This shift from ‘reward’ to ‘resilience’ builds trust and drives stronger long-term engagement.”
Sharad Sharma, CHRO, Pramerica Life Insurance
Platforms such as NOBIAS are enabling HR teams to deliver structured financial education that employees can access at their convenience—whether learning about the 50:30:20 budgeting rule during lunch breaks or exploring investment basics after work hours. This shift from sporadic workshops to continuous digital engagement has proven transformative.
One employee who participated in a NOBIAS-facilitated workshop reported: “The workshop was truly insightful—it gave us a deeper understanding of how money works and how to make better financial choices. It was highly interactive with many ‘lightbulb moments’, and I especially appreciated learning about the 50:30:20 rule and power of compounding.”
This combination of expert-led sessions and digital follow-through addresses a persistent problem: knowledge retention. A single workshop might inspire employees, but without reinforcement and practical tools, the impact fades quickly. Digital platforms provide the continuous engagement necessary to translate knowledge into behavioural change.
Personalisation at scale
The technology enables something previously impossible: personalised financial guidance for thousands of employees simultaneously. Rather than generic advice, platforms can tailor recommendations based on life stage, salary band, financial goals, and risk appetite.
Udaiwal argues that “personalisation is critical. The key is not to look at financial wellness as a one-size-fits-all benefit. It has to be curated for different life stages—whether it’s a fresher navigating their first salary, a mid-level manager juggling EMIs, or a senior leader preparing for retirement.”
Some companies are integrating these digital tools within broader wellness programmes. Myntra’s Thrive initiative, for instance, combines financial wellness resources with physical and mental health support. Through the programme, employees access smart financial planning tools, wealth management guidance, ESOP benefits, and flexible benefit structures.
“Our employees can choose who they want to insure, allowing them to put together their own insurance packages suited to their particular circumstances rather than accepting standardised offerings.”
Govindraj MK, CHRO, Myntra
“Our employees can choose who they want to insure,” explains Govindraj MK, Myntra’s CHRO, describing the company’s MynShield insurance programme, “allowing them to put together their own insurance packages suited to their particular circumstances rather than accepting standardised offerings.”
Digital platforms make such customisation feasible through algorithms that suggest relevant content—first-salary management tips for fresh graduates, home loan strategies for mid-career professionals, retirement planning for senior leaders—without requiring proportional increases in HR headcount.
Some organisations now offer payroll savings schemes that automatically divert salary portions into savings accounts, making financial discipline less burdensome. When integrated with digital financial wellness platforms, employees can track progress, adjust allocations, and receive guidance—all within a single ecosystem.
Measuring returns on resilience
Can financial wellness programmes justify their cost? The business case is increasingly compelling. Reduced absenteeism, improved productivity, and better retention all stem from decreased financial anxiety.
Sharad Sharma, CHRO, Pramerica Life Insurance, contends that “the role of HR goes beyond payouts—it’s about enabling employees to build financial resilience. Programmes centred on financial literacy, financial planning and overall wellness are becoming part of the employee value proposition. This shift from ‘reward’ to ‘resilience’ builds trust and drives stronger long-term engagement.”
Sharma notes that “money stress often fuels anxiety and affects productivity, so combining financial planning with mental and physical wellness initiatives creates stronger impact. Employees value this holistic approach, seeing it not as a transactional benefit but as a genuine commitment to their long-term quality of life.”
Organisations are measuring ROI by comparing programme costs—including platform subscriptions and consulting fees—against tangible improvements: reduced employee turnover, fewer stress-related absences, higher engagement scores. When calculated properly, the returns prove compelling.
Moreover, digital delivery dramatically reduces per-employee costs compared to traditional methods. A platform subscription might cost less than a single external consultant’s workshop, yet reach the entire workforce continuously throughout the year.
Critical questions remain
However, several challenges deserve consideration. First, financial literacy programmes require sustained engagement to produce behavioural change. Initial enthusiasm often wanes, and maintaining long-term participation requires continuous innovation in content and delivery.
Second, the effectiveness of personalised recommendations depends heavily on data quality and employee willingness to share financial information—raising privacy concerns that organisations must navigate carefully.
Third, whilst digital platforms remove cost and scale barriers, they cannot entirely replace human advisors for complex financial decisions. The most effective approaches likely combine technology-enabled education with access to qualified professionals for personalised guidance.
Finally, the ultimate test will be whether improved financial literacy translates into measurable improvements in employee financial health over time—a metric that requires longitudinal tracking beyond simple engagement statistics.
A new employee value proposition
Financial resilience is emerging as a defining element of employee experience. Companies are discovering that whilst bonuses win momentary gratitude, loyalty is built when employees feel secure about their futures.
As technology makes comprehensive financial wellness programmes accessible to organisations of all sizes, the competitive advantage shifts to those who act decisively. The infrastructure now exists to deliver what was previously impossible: personalised, continuous, scalable financial education.
Mishra suggests that “just like learning and career growth became a cornerstone of the employee value proposition in the past, financial wellness will now be non-negotiable. The companies that embrace it early will enjoy not just retention but also a more resilient, engaged and future-ready workforce.”
For India’s anxious young workforce, the question isn’t whether employers should provide financial wellness support—it’s whether they can afford not to. With digital platforms removing the barriers of cost and scale, progressive HR leaders are discovering that the path from financial anxiety to financial resilience has become remarkably achievable.
The shift from transient rewards to lasting resilience represents more than a policy change—it signals a fundamental reimagining of the employment contract for the 21st century.






