In reply to Robey:
Hi Robey, Thank you very for answering my question. I am a band 5 MedicalHR Advisor in my Trust but I am not involved in handling difficult cases, hearing or anything that ER Advisors they do. My role involves only advisory on the T&Cs of residential doctors contracts and re ruti g them into tgeir roles. This is why I am trying to find a route from what I do in Employees Relations. What I do is so specific for the NHS that I am unsure how I can transfer my skillls and qualifications in thie ER type of role not doing the actual job tgey do.In reply to Robey:
And here’s me thinking employee relations was about preventing these sort of issues and improving the employee/employer relationship.In reply to Robey:
I'd second Robey's suggestions about gaining exposure while working in your current role - if there's scope to do it, ask if part of your professional development can involve working with the ER team on case handling (not a secondment - more like shadowing over an agreed period) starting with something like acting as the notetaker for formal cases (this is beneficial to see how case hearings are handled in reality rather than theory, what role the different attendees play etc), and next, getting involved in the prep for cases - as Robey has outlined, it's far more than just scheduling hearings - the documentation prep and written correspondence is super-important in case handling. That's the formal casework bit of ER but an awful lot of ER advisory work is focused on pre-empting issues becoming formal - largely by working closely with line managers to support them maintain a good ER environment - you're already doing advisory work in your current role on Ts & Cs and recruitment practice, so it's an expansion of the range of advice you're able to offer into people management advice. hope this is usefulIn reply to Daniele:
Ah, I see.My role involves only advisory on the T&Cs of residential doctors contracts and re ruti g them into tgeir roles.
In reply to David Perry:
Not really, David. In the NHS, we have L&OD specialists, wellbeing specialists, Freedom to Speak Up Guardians and HR Business Partners who mostly cover this kind of stuff. The smallest NHS Trusts are 5000 people and the largest comfortably over 15000, and HR operations teams are lucky to have ten people in them, of whom maybe 6 will be experts in case management. So the vast majority of the time is spent managing casework.Visit the main CIPD website
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