HR issues faced by Irish business and how to minimise their exposure to these risks

HR issues faced by Irish business and how to minimise their exposure to these risks

 

Stress and burnout: after a challenging number of years, your employees may be suffering from anxiety, stress, or burnout symptoms. These psychosocial issues can have a direct impact on productivity and potentially on the reputation of your business. Employees are more focused than ever on work-life balance and wellbeing. Taking steps to help employees achieve their goals in these areas helps reduce errors, minimise staff turnover and avoid dips in productivity.

Health & safety risks: The main responsibility for health & safety at work rests with the employer regardless of whether an employee works remotely or onsite. Work-related injuries (both physical and psychosocial), whether they happen onsite or in a remote location could lead to financial penalties, brand damage and a deterioration in employee relations.

Recruitment and retention: although the labour market shows recent signs of turning back in favour of employers, it’s crucial for business owners to figure out what will help staff build long-term careers with them. High staff turnover is bad for business so engaging with employees and responding to their feedback on what could help them build a long-term future with you will pay dividends.

Workplace culture: serious misconduct like bullying and harassment or theft and fraud can derail a business. It’s vital to manage these risks through the effective operation of appropriate policies and procedures. Staff should be aware of the values they are expected to uphold. Likewise, if employers don’t deal with grievances in the correct manner, they risk demoralising staff who won’t want to work within an uncaring culture. Preventing grievances in the first place should be the aim but failing to manage employee grievances properly will distract your management team from their main tasks, demotivate staff who think colleagues have not received fair treatment and ultimately hurt your business.

Diversity and inclusion: as the Irish population continues to diversify, it’s important to develop an inclusive and diverse working environment. Failing to address this area of HR will limit your access to the broadest possible talent pool and potentially have reputational consequences that hurt relationships with employees, customers and other stakeholders.

Legal and compliance: as well as the challenge of managing the transition away from pandemic-related work practices, employers also have a wide range of new employment laws to consider. The statutory sick pay scheme came into force in January and affects all employers. The transparent and predictable working conditions regulations impact probation periods and employment contracts and documentation. Most recently, a variety of new work-life balance rights including the right to request remote work will soon need to be acted upon by employers. It’s a major challenge for both employers and employment law practitioners to keep pace with the volume of recent employment regulations.

The costs of ineffective HR risk management

The costs associated with getting any of these HR risks wrong are multiple. Management spend too much time firefighting, employees take their talents elsewhere and ultimately the bottom line suffers.

With the right approach however, business owners can turn all these HR risks into strengths that will make their business more resilient to setbacks and more productive when trade is brisk.

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During the month of August, Peninsula are holding two FREE Employment Law Webinars for business owners.

On Thursday 3rd August - 2pm - 2.45pm, join a Peninsula HR expert to learn about how recent changes in employment law need to be reflected in your contracts, policies and procedures. 

The Ultimate Employer’s Guide to Employment Contracts

Register here

The second webinar takes place on Wednesday 23rd August - 11am - 11.45am and focuses on how to handle a period of maternity leave which is a common HR challenge for many business owners. 

What to Expect When your Employee is Expecting: Maternity Leave Guidance for Employers 

Register here 

Alternatively, you can discuss your employment law compliance or any HR issue you’re experiencing with a Peninsula HR expert on 1800 719 032 or visit our website here

 

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