General Contractual Framework and Data Model
Carrot enters into a framework service agreement with customers. This is sometimes referred to as a “Master Services Agreement (MSA).” This agreement governs the relationship between Carrot (as the vendor) and the employer (as the customer) with respect to the provision of services.
We may also, depending on the countries involved, enter into a Data Processing Agreement (DPA) that governs the processing of personal information by a data processor (Carrot) on behalf of a data controller (the customer) and addresses, as needed, requirements related to international data transfers.
Please note that Carrot’s direct relationship with individual employees is governed by a separate set of agreements (reference FAQ 5).
“Customer Data” is data that Carrot collects from customers in the form of an “Employee Eligibility File (EE File).” The EE File is limited to the following data elements:
- Eligible employee first name, last name, and work email address
- Unique employee identification number
- Eligibility start date
- Date of birth
- Sex
- Zip code (US members only)
Carrot uses Customer Data to provide and improve services. This may involve, among other activities outlined in the MSA:
- Confirming that individual employees are eligible for the Service
- Performing contractual obligations (e.g., sending launch and communications emails where agreed)
Yes, but only to a limited extent, as set forth in the MSA.
Specifically, Carrot provides:
- “Utilization Reports” that show how a customer's employees are utilizing the Carrot benefit (e.g., response times, engagement times, employee feedback). This data is aggregated and de-identified.
- “Reimbursement Reports” to assist customers with certain obligations (e.g., tax and payroll). By necessity, this includes certain identifiable data elements.
We contract separately (via our Terms of Service and Privacy Notice) with a customer’s employees who sign up for Carrot (i.e., “Members”). This means that we have a separate set of responsibilities to Members (e.g., around ownership and use of data) that we are unable to override in our contracts with customers.