Friday 30 September 2011

Hot HR Update 26th -30th September

With over 900 members the group is going from strength to strength. Thank you to all those that have contributed and are using the group, I hope you continue to find the group of use.

We welcome all new members, please recommend the group to all HR Professionals you may know and who are in your network.

Here is a round of what happened in the group this week:

Speed Read from Ward Hadaway: 1. References: What employers need to know.
 2. Facebook: What employers should consider with regard to their employees


 To read more join Hot HR.

 Discussions:
1. I'd love your thoughts on how to motivate a large team who are doing a routine task. Ideas on friendly competition and free ways to encourage production and job satisfaction would be very welcome.     
2.   Has anyone got a social networking policy they are willing to share? we are just working on our and would value other view points   
3.     I'm putting together an employee communications survey - does anyone have any tips on how best to approach this? I'd like to achieve a good response rate if possible. Thanks                                                 

Hot HR content members: 
• Harmajinder Hayre Employment Lawyer from Ward Hadaway Solicitors
   • Stephen Hart owner of Edenchanges training
   • Andy Whittle from Genesys Training
   • David Taylor from Data Protection Consultancy
   • Mark Terry from Edenred Employee Benefits

  • Jenny Cooper from Key Steps Coaching for Stress Management
 
Please use Hot HR as a forum to ask the content members any questions you might have in their fields of expertise, no matter how big or small the question, our experts can help!
 
Hot HR continues to endeavour to add to the portfolio of content members who can add value to the group and to Hot HR members and to compliment each other's skills and expertise. If you have any suggestions for the group please contact me.
 
 Hot HR Hot Spot:
We have 4 regular writers for the Hot Spot - Michael Rabone, HR Manager for The Seafood Restaurant group owned by Rick and Jill Stein, Tim Rawson HR Manager from Travel Jigsaw, Caroline Hackney from Cape and Alison Mulholland from nef.

Thank you to Michael, Tim, Caroline and Alison for their contributions. Please support their articles and dedcation to the group and feel free to respond, ask any questions or if you would like join the exciting Hot Spot writers please contact Alex via Hot HR.

Friday 23 September 2011

Hot HR Update

With over 850 members the group is going from strength to strength. Thank you to all those that have contributed and are using the group, I hope you continue to find the group of use.

We welcome all new members, please recommend the group to all HR Professionals you may know and who are in your network.

Here is a round of what happened in the group this week:

Speed Read from Ward Hadaway:
1. Unfair Dismissal
2. All Aboard! A boost for employers as apprenticeship red-tape is slashed
3. Rest breaks


 To read more join Hot HR.

Discussions:

1. I'd love your thoughts on how to motivate a large team who are doing a routine task. Ideas on friendly competition and free ways to encourage production and job satisfaction would be very welcome.
2. I'm putting together an employee communications survey - does anyone have any tips on how best to approach this? I'd like to achieve a good response rate if possible.
3. What are your thoughts on Investors In People?

Hot HR Content Members:

This week Hot HR welcomed Jenny Cooper from Key Steps Coaching for Stress Management.

Jenny specialises in stress management and will happily answer any questions you may have and will be sharing information within the group about this area that effects us all.

 Current content members:  • Harmajinder Hayre Employment Lawyer from Ward Hadaway Solicitors
  • Stephen Hart owner of Edenchanges training
  • Andy Whittle from Genesys Training
  • David Taylor from Data Protection Consultancy
  • Mark Terry from Edenred Employee Benefits

Please use Hot HR as a forum to ask the content members any questions you might have in their fields of expertise, no matter how big or small the question, our experts can help!

Hot HR continues to endeavour to add to the portfolio of content members who can add value to the group and to Hot HR members and to compliment each other's skills and expertise. If you have any suggestions for the group please contact me.

 Hot HR Hot Spot:

We have 4 regular writers for the Hot Spot - Michael Rabone, HR Manager for The Seafood Restaurant group owned by Rick and Jill Stein, Tim Rawson HR Manager from Travel Jigsaw, Caroline Hackney from Cape and Alison Mulholland from nef.

Thank you to Michael, Tim, Caroline and Alison for their contributions. Please support their articles and dedcation to the group and feel free to respond, ask any questions or if you would like join the exciting Hot Spot writers please contact Alex via Hot HR.

Friday 16 September 2011

Hot HR Update

It's feeling distincly Autumnal this week, but it's hotting up in Hot HR with some  great discussions, Hot Spots and offers from Ward Hadaway.

Thank you to all those that have contributed and are using the group, I hope you continue to find the group of use.

Here is a round of what happened in the group this week:

Discussions:

This week we have had lots of activity and discussion, here is a summary of the most popular (in no particular order):

1. Can anybody tell me if an employer, USA/UK,has the legal right to read or forward the mailbox of a former employee to his/hers manager? This to avoid that tasks are forgotten, contacts are lost etc.

2. Ward Hadaway Insight - For those organisations who find themselves on the wrong end of a discrimination claim, usually the greatest fear is the potentially large financial implications of any award being made by the tribunal in favour of a successful...

3. Who owns a LinkedIn database?

To read more join Hot HR.

Exclusive offer from Ward Hadaway for Hot HR Members:

Ward Hadaway Autumn HR Workshops: Exclusive offer only available to HOT HR members. We are pleased to offer a 30% reduction only to HOT HR members who wish to attend our Autumn HR Workshops.

Hot HR Content Members:

• Harmajinder Hayre Employment Lawyer from Ward Hadaway Solicitors
 • Stephen Hart owner of Edenchanges training
 • Andy Whittle from Genesys Training
 • David Taylor from Data Protection Consultancy
 • Mark Terry from Edenred Employee Benefits

Please use Hot HR as a forum to ask the content members any questions you might have in their fields of expertise, no matter how big or small the question, our experts can help!

Hot HR continues to endeavour to add to the portfolio of content members who can add value to the group and to Hot HR members and to compliment each other's skills and expertise. If you have any suggestions for the group please contact me.

Hot Spot:

Hot HR Hot Spot - 'The Case for Doing Less in HR' by Tim Rawson

We have 4 regular writers for the Hot Spot - Michael Rabone, HR Manager for The Seafood Restaurant group owned by Rick and Jill Stein, Tim Rawson HR Manager from Travel Jigsaw, Caroline Hackney from Cape and Alison Mulholland from nef.

Thank you to Michael, Tim, Caroline and Alison for their contributions. Please support their articles and dedcation to the group and feel free to respond, ask any questions or if you would like join the exciting Hot Spot writers please contact Alex via Hot HR.

Tuesday 13 September 2011

Hot HR Hot Spot - 'The Case for Doing Less in HR' by Tim Rawson

Welcome to the second Hot Spot article written by Tim Rawson, HR Manager for Travel Jigsaw. Thought provoking and interesting - please comment on this article in Hot HR.

The Case for Doing Less in HR
We’ve got a problem. An employee did something, and we didn’t like it. Something went awry last time we processed the payroll file. A manager spoke to an employee in a way we wouldn’t have. HR snaps in to action, forms a committee, draws a diagram, drafts a proposal and two months later, a new policy is ready to solve the world’s ills. Or is it?  
Here’s why you don’t need another policy. Your HR team can’t handle it. Your managers won’t read it, and your employees don’t want it.

OK. Well maybe we can have a couple. We all need a bit of certainty and an agreed ‘way of doing things’ on the key points. Recruitment, disciplinary, grievance etc. But how many policies could we get rid of? How short could we make our employee handbooks and how attractive and readable would they be as a result?

 We all have a disciplinary policy in place and it sets out boundaries of behaviour and conduct. Most companies will have a capability policy which defines how poor performance is tackled. So why on earth would we need a Social Networking Policy, or an Email Policy, a holiday policy, a drugs policy (surely being high at work is covered in the conduct policy?) or a 44 page dress code? Surely as adults we can discuss performance with employees and managers without having to write every minute detail of daily life down at every turn, only for it to need updating and reviewing constantly.

 Now, at this point I may have been tempted to bang on about how no-one needs an Olympics Policy, but credit where it’s due, Simon Jones beat me to it here.

Policies often make it harder to manage people! 

Take a look at your contracts of employment. No doubt drafted by an experienced employment lawyer. What DON’T they cover?
·         ‘Job title and duties’, (basically saying we reserve the right to ask you to do ANYTHING within reason, at ANYTIME)
·         ‘Pay and hours of work’ (which we reserve the right to change too)
·         ‘Absence’ (usually saying most of what your ‘essential’ absence policy says)
 The list goes on. Become familiar with this document, and you’ll be surprised how infrequently you need to refer to a policy. If you have a specific policy, you’ll have to prove the employee had the correct copy and that they agreed to it or had sufficient notice of the change, before using its teeth.

And lastly, if you write a policy which sets out all ‘unacceptable’ activity in a document, you are essentially saying that all other behaviour is de facto acceptable! 

Make a general statement about behaviour and standards, and the company remains in control of interpretation and application of those rules. Draft a policy on everything and we’ll all be chasing our tails forever and a day. 

The company I work for is GREAT at what it does. It doesn’t need me to tell it how to go about its everyday business. So, sometimes, the best you can do as an HR Manager is let the guys who call the customers, seal the deals, and improve the profit margin do what they do best.

 They’ll thank you for it!

Friday 9 September 2011

Hot HR Update 5-9 September

Hello and welcome to this week's Hot HR weekly digest and blog. 

Now the holiday period is over and the kids have returned to school, things will hopefully return to normal with the return of the regular speed reads and updates being posted.

This week there have been some really interesting discussions happening within the group. Thank you to all those that have contributed and are using the group, I hope you continue to find the group of use.

Here is a round of what happened in the group this week:

Discussions:
This week we have had lots of activity and discussion, here is a summary of the most popular (in no particular order):

1. An interesting article on buying a recruitment system for your organisation!
2. Can anybody shed some light on how to approach a situation where a long time employee has just gone missing (AWOL). We have     made numerous attemps to contact him. Could we terminate employment?  

If you would like to comment on any of these discussions please join Hot HR.

Hot HR Content Members:
• Harmajinder Hayre Employment Lawyer from Ward Hadaway Solicitors
 • Stephen Hart owner of Edenchanges training
 • Andy Whittle from Genesys Training
 • David Taylor from Data Protection Consultancy
 • Mark Terry from Edenred Employee Benefits

Please use Hot HR as a forum to ask the content members any questions you might have in their fields of expertise, no matter how big or small the question, our experts can help!

Hot HR continues to endeavour to add to the portfolio of content members who can add value to the group and to Hot HR members and to compliment each other's skills and expertise. If you have any suggestions for the group please contact me.

Hot Spot:
This week we welcomed another exciting new writer for the Hot Spot - Caroline Hackney, HR Manager from Cape UK. Caroline wrote a great article on the HR Balancing act. 

Caroline complements the  existing 3 regular writers for the Hot Spot - Michael Rabone, HR Manager for The Seafood Restaurant group owned by Rick and Jill Stein, Tim Rawson HR Manager from Travel Jigsaw and Alison Mulholland from nef.

Thank you to Michael, Tim, Caroline and Alison for their contributions. Please support their articles and dedcation to the group and feel free to respond, ask any questions or if you would like join the exciting Hot Spot writers please contact Alex via Hot HR.

Wednesday 7 September 2011

Hot HR Hot Spot - The Balancing Act by Caroline Hackney

I'm pleased to welcome Caroline Hackney to the 'Hot Spot'. Caroline is the UK HR Manager -Onshore for Cape UK and has written her first article for Hot HR on the balancing act of HR.   

A little bit about Caroline - Caroline has worked in HR for 12 years and joined Cape plc over three years ago and now holds the position of UK HR Manager for  Onshore operations, which usually peak at around 3000 directly employed personnel. Cape is an international leader in the provision of essential non-mechanical industrial services, principally to plant operators in the oil and gas, power generation, chemical, minerals and mining sectors and major Engineering and Construction (E&C) contractors.

Their UK operations are heavily unionised and they work to various National and Local Agreements. Caroline's role is demanding, interesting and very varied from policy and systems to generalist HR. The UK HR team is purposefully lean to ensure they have a very focused and operational approach to HR in the business.For Caroline, the old clich̩ certainly rings true Рno two days are ever the same!

The Balancing Act
Human Resources, Personnel, People Management, Employee Relations.....whatever you call yourself or whichever speciality you find yourself in, as a HR professional ‘people’ are at the heart of everything we do, aren’t they? But, as businesses buckle down and focus on the bottom line I sense a more ‘operationally led’ shift in the direction of HR; so how do the two reconcile with each other?  
I have spent the past 12 or so years working predominantly for engineering companies, with a brief stint in the public sector. I consider myself to be an operationally driven HR Manager who can consider the bigger picture of the corporate situation whilst still thinking about the impact of those business decisions on the individuals. But how true is this in reality? Can we ever be all things to all people? 
I’ll give you my musings on the subject but would love to hear your viewpoints and experiences – it’s great to get input from all perspectives, industry sectors and it’s impossible to cover all angles in this ‘Hot Spot’ without it turning into ‘War and Peace’. 
Most businesses have seen redundancies and restructuring over the past few years as they evolve to meet the changing economic climate. We all know that this has to happen for the ‘greater good’ but how do we balance this with knowing we are ultimately going to see people lose their jobs?  
My mother asks me very little about what I do for a living; in truth I don’t think she ‘gets’ HR in the least! However a little while ago, when I was in the midst of national consultations relating to a closure of part of the business and refocusing resources elsewhere, she asked what I was busy with at work. When I told her she looked horrified and said ‘How do you sleep at night knowing you are going to be telling people that they have lost their jobs?’. It wasn’t something I’d really thought about in those terms previously and caught me a bit off guard. When I sat back and reflected I concluded that the reason I hadn’t been losing sleep was because of the manner in which we were tackling the issue. It had been considered, planned and communicated well at the ‘at risk’ stage. We were then taking the time to travel the length and breadth of the country to spend as long as needed with individuals ranging from labourers to managers. They appreciated the time, effort and thought that was being expended on the process and despite being a large plc we were treating them as individuals and with respect. It wasn’t a ‘nice’ job but I took pride in handling the situation with sensitivity, whilst still keeping the business priorities in mind.  
I’ve worked in teams that are so wrapped up in the people issues that the HR department has no business credibility and is actually seen as a ‘blocker’ to operational activities. I think that this achieves nothing but frustration on all sides.  
To be an effective HR department or manager we need to have robust systems and  procedures, fit for purpose, and of an appropriate level of detail. They need to be backed up with common sense HR advice where required. I believe in empowering managers by imparting knowledge and then providing a safety net if they need it. I think that the HR function should be the conscience of a business – a sounding board for the fairness of decisions and a problem solver for the ‘difficult’ situations businesses of all sizes inevitably find themselves in. If we do all this effectively then I think it is possible to balance business and people priorities. Nobody’s perfect, we all make mistakes and errors of judgement, but if we work with other parts of our businesses, make informed and sound decisions and then treat people with respect we can achieve harmony.....at least most of the time!!
So, that’s my two penneth’s worth. What’s yours?