The Wellness Operations Maturity Index
WOMI is an operational maturity framework for wellness organizations. It measures how an organization runs — the systems, processes, workflows, and coordination it uses to deliver services at scale — and places it on a 0–100 scale across five stages.
An independent industry research study
Operational maturity, not employee wellbeing
WOMI assesses the operational backbone of a wellness organization. It is deliberately distinct from employee-wellbeing indices, program-participation metrics, or health outcomes — it does not measure how well people feel, only how well the organization operates.
A higher WOMI means an organization relies less on manual effort and key individuals, and more on connected systems, real-time visibility, and repeatable processes — the operational leverage that lets it grow without proportional administrative drag.
Seven dimensions, weighted by impact
A WOMI score is built from seven operational dimensions. Each is scored 0–100, then weighted and combined into a single index. The weights reflect how strongly each dimension shapes an organization's ability to scale.
How many disconnected tools are in play, and how often the same information is entered more than once.
How well systems share data automatically, so a change in one place updates everywhere else.
How much of day-to-day delivery depends on manual effort, coordination, and one-off steps.
How ready operations feel to absorb significantly more volume without breaking.
How much critical operational knowledge lives with a few individuals rather than in shared systems.
How easily the organization can see status, workload, and performance in real time.
How prepared the organization's systems and processes are to support its planned growth.
Five stages of operational maturity
A combined score maps to one of five stages. Most organizations in the 2026 benchmark fall within Custom Workarounds — capable of growth, but leaning on fragile, people-dependent processes.
Operations depend primarily on memory, email, phone calls, paper records, and informal processes.
Specialized software is adopted, but workflows remain fragmented and information is frequently duplicated.
Spreadsheets, templates, internal documentation, and informal systems bridge operational gaps — supporting growth but introducing complexity and key-person dependency.
More sophisticated operational infrastructure and increasingly standardized workflows.
Operations become highly visible, measurable, and continuously optimized through operational data and organizational learning.
How a WOMI score is calculated
The method is deterministic and transparent.
- 1Each of the seven dimensions is scored from 0 to 100, where 100 is the most mature.
- 2Each dimension is multiplied by its weight, and the results are summed into a single 0–100 index.
- 3The combined index is mapped to one of the five maturity stages.
Higher means more operationally mature.
How the industry scored
Across 50 wellness organizations, the average WOMI was 54.6. Growth Readiness was the strongest dimension and key-person dependency the weakest.
The typical organization sits within the Custom Workarounds stage.
Maturity Dimension Scores
WOMI dimensions, scored 0–100 (higher is more mature)
From the State of Wellness Operations 2026 benchmark (n = 50).
For the full methodology, dataset, and findings, read the complete benchmark report.
Estimate your WOMI stage in about two minutes — free, anonymous, nothing saved.