How companies play a role in advocating for working parents

by
Jenna Vassallo
May 22, 2024
Two colleagues chat at a conference table

Although more than 80% of voters support paid parental leave, the United States has yet to pass a mandate to provide it to working families.

With paid leave being one of the most sought after benefits candidates and employees look for, it puts a lot of pressure on companies to offer such benefits if they want to attract top talent.

Many companies want to create a satisfactory environment for working parents – both through paid parental leave policies and additional support for employees growing their families – but they struggle to figure out how to implement it.

Whether due to financial concerns or worries about how offering this time off will be too disruptive to the business, we’ve heard it all.

And this is why we love stories like Bobbie’s: a 200-employee organic formula company that provides employees with 16 weeks of paid parental leave and additional support to navigate the parental leave experience.

Sarah Hardy, co-founder and chief people and experience officer, says the company invests so much time in parental leave support “Because it matters. It matters to me personally. It matters to our team. It matters to our leadership team.”

Take Our Leave & Parents Push Harder: Two impactful campaigns

Bobbie first created its Take Our Leave program to provide other companies with a real example of a paid parental leave policy.

The company open-sourced its own parental leave policy with the intent to to prove it’s possible - even for small companies - to put something in place that’s affordable and supports employees.

Not only was this a beneficial tool for other organizations; it also built their inbound recruiting pipeline by 50% overnight, thus proving how important parental leave is to candidates and employees.

Its more recent campaign, the Parents Push Harder program, is based on the Family and Medical Insurance Leave Act. If passed, this Act would guarantee a minimum monthly amount of $580 to families.

In partnership with athlete Naomi Osaka, who became a parent last year, this campaign offered $580 grants to 50 lucky applicants who explained the positive impact a federal program like it would have on their lives.

The company received 11,000 applications, and through a coalition of brands, partners and individuals who joined forces and shared resources, Bobbie was able to increase the number of grants 4x to support 200 families.

Practicing what they preach

What exactly does Bobbie offer through its parental leave policy?

Bobbie’s initial parental leave policy focused on the entire business—not just the expecting employee, but their managers and teams to ensure they and the business didn’t take the hit when an employee went on leave.

Expecting employees are assigned someone on the people team, and their managers remain front and center to collaborate on clear transition plans. And while the company offers 16 weeks of paid leave, employees can choose to extend their leave with up to eight months of unpaid leave for one full year of job-protected leave.

Because they’ve created this supportive culture, they hear much earlier than many other businesses when an employee is expecting. This breeds open and honest conversations about how they stretch to accommodate both the employee and the business.

“It requires intentionality and thought, wanting to do the right thing for your employees, and not dropping the ball on what you need to give managers to succeed,” Sarah said.

Bobbie’s paid parental leave policy and advocacy are making the transition to parenthood easier—and driving business results.

“When you do things that support parents, it’s not just about supporting individual parents in your organization,” Sarah said. “It’s about the halo effect it also has over the rest of your team and your external employer brand as well.”

To celebrate all we’ve accomplished, our team shared what they’re most proud of since joining the team:

I'm most proud of how much we have done to improve the single hardest moment for women's careers (going on parental leave) ... one that is often shrouded in insecurity and fear. We've been able to help advocate for so many women (and men!) in a way that is empowering and truly life-changing.

Allison Whalen, CEO & Founder

What am I most proud of? Growth! Growing a category of support that didn't exist before Parentaly. Growing from a one-woman bootstrapped operation to a global team of 25+ employees and coaches. Growing our overall impact for working parents, with companies investing in our parental leave programming to support employees all over the world. And growing as humans: new babies, new friends, new life experiences... all while tackling new and exciting work challenges together.

Rich Burke, Head of Growth

When I reflect on what I am personally most proud of during my time here, it's working alongside a team where we constantly evolve and optimize everything that we do in order to deliver the best possible experience for the folks going through our programs. It sounds cheesy, but there are processes that my team and I used to do 100% manually that are now completely automated and systems in place that have become second nature to how we operate. Working with such thoughtful, smart, and creative people is incredible.

Sara Ophoff, Senior Program Manager

I’m most proud about doing work that makes parents feel confident and empowered about their careers during a time that can be overwhelming and challenging – not only for our clients and users who go through Parentaly’s programs, but also with our advocacy work on LinkedIn, through our podcast and other big campaigns that make a difference. It’s been pretty rewarding to build a brand people know and love because what we’re doing resonates with so many employees’ experiences in the workforce.

Jenna Vassallo, Head of Brand & Marketing

I am so proud of the way we've approached growth with such care and intentionality - with every adjustment we've made to our offerings, we've never lost sight of our goal to provide the most supportive and valuable experience for our users. I love looking back on the early stages of conversations and building that have led us to the experience we offer today. Personally, I am extremely proud of the work I've done to scale and automate our backend!

Rachel Andes, Program Associate

I am most proud of the work we do every single day to make a positive impact on working parents! Everyday I get to work with an amazing group of people…we work hard but we also have fun.

Sarah Gruber, Client Partner

I'm proud of scaling an employee experience that consistently delivers positive outcomes for new parents and their organizations. Our north star has always been the user, and we never sacrifice our high quality bar!

Mansi Kothari, VP of Product & Experience

I feel a sense of pride that I get to work behind the scenes supporting everyone. I’m proud to see all of the collaboration between the team and how Parentaly positively impacts employees.

Leo Manalo, Executive Assistant

I'm most proud of going through the Parentaly program myself! I'm so proud to work for and promote this company in a time where parental leave and supportive policies are at the forefront of a national conversation. But beyond this, I'm most proud to call myself a participant.

Emmy Carragher, Enterprise Partnerships

I’m really proud of the work I did to expand our coaching bench globally at Parentaly. It was so rewarding, not to mention insightful, to connect with talented coaches from around the globe. This expansion not only enriched our coaching offerings but also strengthened our commitment to making a meaningful impact on families all over the world.

Nicole Hagemann-Bex, Senior Coaching Operations Manager

I have tremendous pride in the knowledge that what I am doing will change the career landscape for new parents, particularly mothers. This will make it more likely that my daughter can have a career AND a family without worrying about the unintentional negative impact of taking parental leave. Nothing makes me prouder than that.

Mindy Himmel-Brown, Strategic Partnerships

In my short time at Parentaly, I'm proudest of the work we're doing with our clients' ERG groups to elevate the stories and advice of actual working parents. It's such an impactful way to spread the word about Parentaly as an essential resource for all people growing their families, and the managers who support them!

Alex Diskin, Enterprise Account Manager

I'm most proud about using LinkedIn to connect with others. I was recently able to share a helpful return to work doc with 50+ new people looking to make a difference at their company. Was pretty cool that people from Chewy, McDonald's, Honda, Cisco, AWS, Walmart and more want to integrate just a piece of what we have to offer. Also...I'm so proud of the way I feel as an employee at Parentaly. For the first time in my career my personal interests align with my professional interests and I've never felt more motivated.

Jenny Hurwitz, Strategic Partnerships

I'm really proud of being able to help the Experience team by handling the supportive functions so they can focus on the bigger picture. It feels great to know that I’m making things easier for them and contributing to the team’s success.

James Mango, Executive Assistant
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Hear more on Bobbie's advocacy work and how they implemented a policy that works for everyone

Listen to this episode of The False Tradeoff.