‘Work-life’ comes to the office: KC design firm offers teacher, space for students as an employee benefit
September 21, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Juggling Zoom meetings and remote work is difficult enough for single adults — let alone parents trying to manage the ins and outs of their kids’ virtual school routines during COVID-19 shutdowns and restrictions, said Melissa Nickel.
“I do not want my children just to survive, I want them to thrive,” Nickel, operations lead at Engenious Design, said of her decision to approach company leadership about launching an in-office program that facilitates virtual learning regimens for students of employees working onsite.
“That’s the hope of every parent at this moment, trying to understand this. So rather than looking at all the things I don’t like, I’m going to work to find a creative solution.”
Fortunately for Nickel, Engenious is a company that embodies outside-the-box thinking, she said.
“We can think about it like health insurance or the other benefits that we provide,” Nickel said, detailing an executive summary she submitted to Chris Justice, Engenious CEO — who himself has elementary school-aged children.
Click here to learn more about Engenious Design — a Prairie Village-based medical device design firm.
“He said, ‘Absolutely, go for it,’ he gave me the yes and I embarked [on the research] because we’re not in the education business,” she said, recalling research that drove the project forward over two-months of planning.
The company ultimately hired an in-house facilitator who helps parents manage their students’ class requirements — as outlined by their individual school districts — and facilities onsite learning in a socially distant set of unused offices-turned-classrooms, Nickel explained.
“There is a boost in productivity, but it’s also less stress on our team, because they don’t have to worry, ‘Oh, how am I going to be on this Zoom call and get my child set up on a Zoom call?’” Nickel said of immediate and obvious benefits to the program — which formally rolled out earlier this month and welcomed eight students, kindergarten through fifth grade.
“We try to get them outside every two hours to go have playtime, just to get the wiggles out,” she laughed, noting a key component of the program is realizing kids weren’t made to exist in offices.
“[My kids] call it, ‘School at Mom’s work,’ I think that most children are done with being home, just with their siblings. The ability to get out with their peers [has them] extremely excited.”

Photo courtesy of Engenious Design
The program will be offered to employees working onsite on a semester-by-semester basis, she added.
“We’ve seen huge relief in our employees,” Nickel said. “We are a very family-friendly organization, but also just human. We realized that work-life balance is important and we wanted to create a space where we can do our work — but recognize the other important things that we have going on.”
And making sure the company has its employees backs is among the most important core values at Engenious, Nickel said.
“I think that that message has come across, not just for employees who have children, but for those that don’t,” she said. “We believe every aspect of our work matters. Not just in our work with our careers, but in our work with our families.”
As the needs of the modern workplace evolve, similar programs could become a mainstay in offices across the country as America works to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, Nickel predicted.
“We’ve already done the hard legwork, and until our world returns to a little bit of normal, I’d like to continue to offer this,” she said. “Flexibility is super important as we look at 2020 and maybe 2021. I think having the option and the ability to do this is a really positive thing.”
2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kansas City startup ‘walks the talk,’ bungee jumps
Sara Davidson doesn’t lightly espouse a message of fearlessness in business. And that’s why Davidson, the founder of Hello Fearless, is live broadcasting her jump off a cable car in Switzerland. Davidson is hoping to inspire other women around the world to conquer their fears not only with a live-streamed bungee jump — out of a…
Kansas City seeks leaders for Smart City board
The City of Kansas City, Mo., is now seeking nominations to lead the city’s smart city efforts. City leaders hope to attract citizens with experience in smart city technologies to help advise the City of Fountain’s coming Cisco Smart City project, in addition to its other smart city efforts. The newly authorized “Smart City Advisory…

