Thursday, September 1, 2011

Open and shut


Welcome to this week’s Discuss HR, the HR blog written by the members of Human Resources UK.

Thank you to everyone who has expressed an interest in becoming a writer for Discuss HR.  I have found the quality of writers who have applied somewhat overwhelming, which is only a good thing!  I am pleased to announce we have appointed 2 new writers Una Doyle and Susan Popoola.  Both will add a distinct slant to discussing HR topics within the group.  We shall also be increasing the number of guest writers as well as Q&As with prominent HR professionals.  So all in all it is exciting times ahead!

Today, regular writer and employment law expert Annabel Kaye has written an excellent article which perfectly embodies what we have been trying to achieve with this blog.  I hope you enjoy it.  (Ed Scrivener)


Open and shut

Sooner or later every HR practitioner is faced with the open and shut case.   A case where on the fact of it, the actions taken are so blatantly wrong that there seems little point in taking a lot of time to decide what needs to be done.    Busy line managers can exert considerable pressure to come to a conclusion and move on.

The canny HR manager often uses employment law as a way of slowing things down and encouraging everyone to reflect.  It is much easier sometimes to say “the lawyers want us to do this” than it is to say “I think your decision may be flawed and misses some key data”.  I have had HR practitioners ring me and say “Give me a reason why we can’t make a decision today”.

When it comes to decisions on discipline and dismissal the employment law requirements for a good process are not that different to the classic good process for making a sound decision.   The problem is most of us are not good at making sound decisions – particularly when we are upset.




Is it obvious? Or should we be warned?
Managers, being human are often keen to rush to a conclusion and by-pass any real decision making process.   This can cost the organisation dearly – not only in legal terms – but in terms of losing individuals who might otherwise have benefited the organisation over the longer term.

Here are some open and shut cases.  

Before you click the link to find out how it turned out, ask yourself:  What would my managers do?  What would I advise?

1.       Seeing red.
A customer complained that a waitress deliberately tipped a jug of iced-water into his lap and stormed off.   The waitress had only been employed for six weeks.  When asked about the incident she agreed that is what she did.  Her line manager was anxious to ‘get rid’ saying she was obviously volatile.

2.       A word to the wise
A retailer had half a dozen staff in each of three shops.  He was a very hands-on boss and knew all his staff quite well and saw them regularly.  He regularly opened and closed each of the shops and often worked alongside his staff during the day.

One of his staff had worked for him for a couple of years, and had been quite reliable and hard working.  He started getting into work late and seemed to have lost all interest in the job or getting in on time.  One day, the owner was standing by the door of the shop when the guy turned up 15 minutes late for his shift.   What time do you call this?” said the boss.  He was met with a mouthful of abuse in front of all the other staff at the shop.   

3.       To catch a thief
Our client had two warehouses at opposite ends of the country.  They carried similar stock, had similar staffing levels, and were in similar areas (from a demographic point of view), yet one warehouse had a shrinkage (theft) rate way above the others.
On a fairly regular basis, security would catch someone stealing an item or two.  They were interviewed and dismissed.   All the captured thieves said “everybody is doing it”... but they would say that, wouldn’t they?    

It is easy to blame employment law for having to ‘jump through hoops’ and go through tortuous and unnecessary processes.   But people decisions are very important decisions for the organisation, and for the individuals concerned.     Employment law places great stress on the decision making process (otherwise known as the investigatory and disciplinary process).   We shouldn’t need laws to make us go through a rounded decision making process,  but following employment law requirements can have that beneficial effect.     We can use employment law related decisions as a way of teaching better decision processes – to the benefit of the business in the round.   Or, as we often say, “let’s turn our lemons into lemonade”.


About the author
Annabel Kaye has been specialising in employment law since the seventies.  She founded Irenicon in 1980 and has spent the last thirty years helping HR, line managers and everyone else look at employment law in a way that gets some organisational gain. She likes to think about things from a different angle and making the complex simple – despite the government’s best efforts.   She has traded through three recessions and advised clients from multi-national corporations to the smallest organisation. The toughest thing has always been to balance the competing needs of staff and organisation and that never goes away whatever the legal details.

*****

Discuss HR is the blog for Human Resources UK, the leading LinkedIn group for those involved with HR in the UK.  Next week’s Discuss HR will be published on Thursday 8th September and will be written by experienced HR professional Sheena McLullich.

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