Hi,
Can anyone advice on how best to review existing HR policy documents and what approaches can be taken in reviewing them (tools etc). Any recommendations?
Hi,
Can anyone advice on how best to review existing HR policy documents and what approaches can be taken in reviewing them (tools etc). Any recommendations?
In reply to Robey:
Hi Robey
If your policy is to do the legal minimum, policy changes will be driven by changes in the law. If your policy is an expression of an ethos and your beliefs on how people at work should be treated, then your policy may be well in advance of the law and you will not be able to rely on external triggers like case law to keep it fresh and relevant.
In an SME, some policies and procedures might not be needed for years, but that makes it more important to have them, not less. When a particular situation occurs with reasonable frequency, you remain fairly current on how to address it. When something is serious and important but happens very infrequently, like a death in service in an SME, the last thing you need is people faffing around because they aren't sure what line they should be taking. Another example: our policy statement on imprisonment (yes, this has happened) begins: "It is an extremely rare event for a member of staff to be held on remand or given a custodial sentence. For this reason, this policy records our approach to situations of this type so that we do not have to work out how to handle the situation afresh each time it recurs."
On your point about HR taking over responsibility and authority for making changes to policy, I see a governance issue. Directors should sign off on key policies which are there to ensure that the organisation, in the person of the board of directors who carry the legal liability, fulfills its legal responsibilities, so I think that Viv is doing the right thing in sending policies to her school governors for comment and sign off. The functional specialists then draft procedures based on the policy position of the board or governing body, but you really want management to feel that the organisation's position as set out in a policy is how *we* do things round here, not how HR does things, so I'd be a bit wary about campaigning for HR to take full responsibility.
In reply to Elizabeth Divver:
Yes, of course, if you're talking about introducing a new policy or making a significant change to a core HR policy, involvement at the highest level is an excellent idea and HR shouldn't be free to do what they please.In reply to Robey:
I would say that the policy statement on maternity pay would be something along the lines of "we will ensure all employees receive their statutory entitlements" or " we wish to ensure that there is no financial pressure to return early and therefore offer enhancements to statutory entitlements" The prevailing rate of SMP would then be part of the procedure, not the policy. In other words, I am making a distinction between the policy, which sets out an approach, and a procedure which enacts that approach. If that seems like splitting hairs, just think what a help it would be to you in your current situation.Visit the main CIPD website
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