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The employee value proposition has never been under more scrutiny. Workers no longer want vague promises about “great culture” or “growth opportunities.” They want real support from employers who do what they say.
Many companies still offer benefits that sound good on paper but do not always help employees when they need support most. Medical aid, retirement contributions, and wellness apps are useful, but they do not help in the exact moment an employee feels unsafe, is followed to their car, is hijacked, or has a medical emergency after work.
According to Gallup's State of the Global Workplace 2025 Report, global employee engagement fell to just 21% in 2024 — costing the world economy an estimated $438 billion in lost productivity. Meanwhile, a 2025 Selerix benefits survey found that 73% of employees say benefits matter as much or more than salary when deciding whether to stay in a role. The quality and relevance of what employers offer is directly linked to whether their people choose to stay, engage, and trust the organisation.
In South Africa, this matters. Personal safety is part of everyday life for many employees. People are commuting through high-risk areas, working late, travelling between branches, and relying on emergency services that may take too long to arrive.
South Africa fell 50 places on the 2025 Global Safety Index, with the report identifying everyday personal safety and violent crime as the country’s primary safety concerns.
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For many employees, personal safety is not an abstract issue. People travel through high-risk areas, work late, visit different branches, and sometimes wait too long for emergency help.
When something goes wrong, employees want to know their employer will support them. According to AlertMedia’s 2025 State of Employee Safety Report, which surveyed more than 3,000 full-time employees:
The message is clear: employees expect employers to play a bigger role in protecting their wellbeing.
The most powerful components of an employee value proposition are those that address foundational human needs — security, dignity, and the certainty that the organisation has your back. On-demand emergency response meets all three, in the moments that matter most.
Most employee benefits are passive. Medical aid helps after someone gets sick. Wellness platforms only work if employees actively use them. Employee assistance programmes often help after a stressful event has already happened.
Emergency response is different. It is immediate and designed for high-pressure situations where every minute matters.
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For an employee driving home late at night, walking through a dark parking lot, or travelling between sites, knowing they can quickly get access to emergency support with a simple tap on their phone can provide real peace of mind.
This is more than just another workplace perk. It is a benefit that helps employees feel protected and valued in their everyday lives.
Keeping skilled employees has become increasingly difficult. While unemployment in South Africa is high, experienced professionals still have options and are willing to move to employers that offer better support and benefits.
Losing employees is expensive. Research consistently shows that replacing an employee costs between 50% and 200% of their annual salary — once recruitment fees, onboarding time, lost productivity, and institutional knowledge loss are factored in.
The Selerix 2025 study found that employees satisfied with their benefits are five times more likely to stay with their employer and 3.5 times more likely to trust their employer, stay with the company longer, and feel more motivated at work.
PwC's Global Workforce Hopes and Fears Survey adds the motivational dimension: employees with the highest levels of psychological safety are 72% more motivated than those who feel least safe. In a market where physical safety is a genuine, daily concern, providing real emergency response directly raises that baseline — for every employee who knows the benefit exists, whether or not they ever need to use it.
When employees know their employer has invested in protecting them, it builds loyalty and trust in a way that many traditional benefits cannot.
In the past, providing emergency response support to employees seemed expensive and difficult to manage. Today, technology platforms like AURA make it possible for companies of all sizes to offer these services without building their own infrastructure.
AURA connects employees to a nationwide network of private security and medical responders across South Africa. When someone triggers an emergency alert, the closest vetted responder can be dispatched quickly using GPS technology, with an average emergency response time of under 10 minutes.
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AURA's People Protect solution supports multiple deployment models: a white-label company-branded app, API integration with existing HR or communications platforms, or a dedicated emergency phone line. Employers receive a centralised management console covering real-time incident tracking, user management, analytics, and full call-out history — providing both operational visibility and the auditable compliance records that OHSA due diligence requires.
The offering covers the full range of emergencies South African employees actually face: armed security response, private ambulance and paramedic dispatch, road and accident assistance, and crime-victim support. This is a genuine, on-demand safety net — not a passive wellness portal.
For businesses looking to add safety response to their EVP, there are a few important things to consider.
Does the solution cover your full employee footprint — not just head office, but regional branches, field teams, and late-shift workers across all provinces where your people operate?
PSIRA registration is non-negotiable for legitimate private security response in South Africa. Ensure your provider enforces this standard rigorously across their entire network.
A benefit no one uses is a wasted investment. A solution that embeds into your existing company app or onboarding process will always achieve higher activation than a standalone tool requiring separate download and setup.
Employers should ensure the platform provides proper incident tracking and reporting to support duty-of-care and compliance requirements.
Employees need to understand the benefit and how to use it. Businesses should include it in onboarding and regular internal communication.
South Africa’s safety challenges require more from employers than a wellness app or a written duty-of-care policy. Employees face real risks every day, and many are making career decisions based on which organisations take those risks seriously.
A modern employee value proposition should answer an important question employees are already asking: if something goes wrong, will my employer help me?
On-demand safety response gives employers a real way to answer that question. It provides employees with immediate access to help when they need it most and helps organisations build stronger trust, loyalty, and long-term retention.