While corporate relocations can—and should—be exciting, like any major lifestyle change, they can also be challenging and stressful. For this reason, some relocation programs include destination services, a benefit that helps employees and their families adapt more easily to new environments.
Some of these challenges are logistical, like navigating the immigration process. Others are emotional—i.e., feeling like a stranger in a strange land. Either way, destination services help employees and their families navigate these hurdles, so they acclimate more quickly and fully to their new surroundings.
To be clear, not all relocations require destination services. Many relocation programs already provide employees with the support and information they need to plan their move and get to know their new area.
However, in some situations, acclimating is harder—and an employee’s failure to do so can become a costly, painful problem. In such situations, destination services can help reduce this risk of failure, which benefits everyone.
Destination services are most often used to help smooth international relocations. Moving to a different country means becoming immersed in a new culture, possibly needing to learn a new language and mastering unfamiliar social rules and expectations.
While this is often exhilarating, it can also be overwhelming. In fact, Mercer, a global consulting leader, has identified an “expatriate adjustment cycle”–a predictable emotional and psychological journey expats experience. It consists of four phases, which include:
Destination services can be invaluable during global moves, by helping employees prepare in advance for what’s ahead, minimizing culture shock and speeding acclimation.
In addition, destination services are sometimes employed in important domestic relocations, such as white-glove executive moves.
Destination Services has numerous facets, which commonly include:
Cultural and Language Training
One of the best ways to accelerate the assimilation process is to immerse employees and their families in their new culture before they arrive. Cross-cultural training prepares them for what to expect, making the unfamiliar more accessible.
In addition, language training is generally made available to the entire family, facilitating better communication with new neighbors and coworkers—an assimilation must.