📺 Stream EntrepreneurTV for Free 📺

This Company's New Perk Is Sending Employees on International Trips Its CFO shares her tips for how you can implement a similar program at your business.

By Rose Leadem

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

Experticity

Influencer marketing startup Experticity has taken work perks global, with the company offering to pay for its charitable employees to go on all-expenses-paid humanitarian trips around the world.

"We're always trying to find interesting, unique ways to motivate our employees and make them proud to work," Experticity CFO Heather Mercier told Entrepreneur.

Related: The Well-Being Perks You Never Thought to Offer

So how does it work? Any employee who has been at the company for at least one year and participated in payroll giving for at least six months (that could be donating between $2 to $150 per paycheck) is given the opportunity to travel to Nepal, Bolivia, Kenya or Ecuador on the company's dime. On these trips, Experticity volunteers could be working on a number of different projects depending on the needs of the place they visit, including building classrooms, community water systems, health clinics or personal hygiene workshops or training locals in micro-enterprises.

"This is a really unique way to give to our employees and fuel their passion for giving back to the world and building camaraderie," Mercier says. The program is about empowering employees and team building. "If there's a group of five employees that go to Nepal, what they bring back after that trip will spread way beyond just those five people."

Related: How to Give Your Employees Real Benefits, Not Just Cheap Perks

Mercier further expanded on what on how she's rolled out the new program and provided some tips for how you can build something similar at your company.

1. Find the right partner.

"When [you're] coming up with the program, [have] a really good partner," Mercier says. For Experticity, that meant finding a company that holds similar core values. Experticity partnered with Choice Humanitarian, which books flights and provides documentation requirements.

2. Listen to employees.

Don't make the decisions alone -- work with the entire company to decide on certain aspects of the program.

"We had the whole company (more than 240 employees) vote on five different causes to support and it was a pretty overwhelming vote -- they wanted to choose clean water because it has so many implications in people's lives," Mercier says. "And then we chose five different groups that supported clean water around the world and rolled out the program."

Related: This Is the One Simple Thing Employees Really Want

3. Pursue programs that align with your company.

"Many of our employees are very passionate about giving back and making the world a better place," Mercier says. "This is a really unique way to give to our employees and fuel their passion for giving back to the world and building camaraderie."

Rose Leadem is a freelance writer for Entrepreneur.com. 

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Editor's Pick

Business Plans

Key Financial Metrics Every Founder Should Know About

Getting a handle on your startup's finances is essential for any new business owner.

Money & Finance

12 Books That Self-Made Millionaires Swear By

The bookshelves of millionaires can inspire you to build your wealth. Here are 12 must-reads they recommend.

Business News

Spotify Removes a Key Feature From Its Free Music Listening Tier

The change is unofficial, so far, but social media users on Reddit and X have noticed a cap on using the lyrics feature.

Growing a Business

'Marketing Happy Hour' Podcast Hosts Share the Best Way to Connect With Consumers: 'Think of Social Media Like a First Date'

Brand marketing experts and hosts of the Marketing Happy Hour podcast share tips on how to launch, grow, and make the most out of your small business's online presence.

Green Entrepreneur®

A Deer Invasion in Hawaii Has Turned Into an Environmental Crisis—And a Sustainable Business Opportunity

How Maui Nui Venison built a for-profit harvesting business that protects the land and helps the local community.