In a Nutshell: Five steps for managing workplace conflict

Workplace conflict can be caused by anything from differences in individuals’ personalities and style to disagreements over the direction of given ideas and activities. It can even be the result of an office romance. But unresolved conflict can lead to a loss of productivity, increased employee stress levels, less effective collaboration and team-problem solving as […]
News: Informal training as effective as traditional methods – study

The majority of employers that turned to informal training methods as a means of cutting learning and development costs have found that they are just as, if not more, effective than more traditional approaches. According to a study by by XpertHR, two-thirds of the organisations that it questioned have taken steps to prune training expenditure […]
News: HMRC worker sacked after being found guilty of sharing tax credit details

A tax office worker has been sacked after using work computer systems to disclose confidential information to her landlord. Natalie Brennan, 41, could go to prison after pleading guilty to wrongful disclosure at Preston Crown Court. Her crime was to divulge information about a tax credits claim made by Mary Houghton, a former partner […]
The HRZone Interview: CIPD’s Stephanie Bird on the evolution of HR

About a quarter of HR directors these days come into the function from other areas, while the most successful act as “boundary-less leaders”, borrowing and reapplying ideas and techniques from other disciplines. According to Stephanie Bird, director of HR capability at the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development, an increasing number of HRDs have “zigzag […]
Blog: HR – Where has all the passion gone?

This is one of my favourite quotes from one of my favourite movies – Serendipity – I know, I know, but what can I say? I’m a sucker for a love story 😉 The quote is from the scene when Dean reads out a make believe Obituary: “The Greeks didn’t write obituaries. They only asked one question after […]
Blog: Abandon principles – Your friend is after a job

Does the HR department actually make a contribution? Is it a burden we could do without? I only ask because this Telegraph article, by Dan Hodges, the former director of communications for Transport for London, suggests that HR has no role to play. The writer describes how he landed his job with no qualifications, […]
The senior HR interim recruitment market: An insight

What’s the current global interim market like? From a UK financial services perspective it’s very competitive, with more candidates than opportunities. The current market consists of career interims, ex-consultants happy to be interims, and those available immediately who are ideally seeking perm but will take a contract in the meanwhile. With the candidate market being […]
Three ways for HR leaders to thrive in today’s changing business landscape

In recent years – and even more so in recent months – the business landscape has changed dramatically. It has become more global, more complex, faster-paced and less predictable. The competing and conflicting challenges that leaders face today have morphed from the ‘tame’, if complicated, issues that could be tackled successfully using tried and […]
Book and Film Review: Moneyball by Michael Lewis

The plot Moneyball, which first appeared as a book in 2003, was re-published following the release of a recent film, which starred Brad Pitt and earned him an Oscar nomination. I decided to review it because, as I read the book and watched the film, I found myself thinking about the broader business implications […]
News: Big brand retailers urged to employ ex-offenders

The Justice Secretary plans to call on big brand high street retailers later this month to try and encourage them to recruit former prisoners in a bid to cut reoffending rates. The move comes on top of the coalition government’s decision in March to make former prisoners join its Work Programme immediately on their […]
News: Employers join with working mums to slam proposed maternity leave cuts

Employers and working mums have joined together in slamming coalition government proposals to cut default maternity leave from 26 to 18 weeks in order to share the remaining entitlement between both partners. Legislative changes to maternity and paternity leave, which are expected to be announced in the Queen’s Speech on Wednesday 9 May, were greeted […]
News: Boots’ move to slash Sunday pay unlawful, rules tribunal

A move by Boots to slash workers’ Sunday pay has been ruled unlawful by an employment tribunal and could see it having to pay out thousands of pounds in compensation. The retailer cut its Sunday pay rate for employees that were taken on before October 2000 from double time to time-and-a-half last June. The […]
Ask the Expert: What is the legal status of union-appointed safety reps?

The question Under The Safety Representatives and Safety Committees Regulations 1977 and The Health and Safety (Consultation with Employees) Regulations 1996, only trades unions can appoint safety representatives – they can do this whether the employer wishes them to or not and indeed they can appoint as many safety representatives as they want. These […]
Blog: Can you tell your performance measurement from your performance management?

Performance Management is an Art! If you want to be cutting edge you need to measure your results and performance manage your team. Getting the best out your people can sometimes be a stressful business. In my many years of managing and subsequently as an HR professional, one of the biggest barriers to great […]
Blog: What HR can learn from alien abductions

As an Investors In People assessor, I frequently ask staff what would happen if they were abducted by aliens tomorrow. Not because I’m interested in probes and things (although I’m sure that would be quite fascinating.) What I’m interested in is whether staff would be conspicuous by their absence. Would critical work not get […]
Legal Insight: The pros and cons of the employee share ownership model

On the last day of April, the government agency that administers the pensions of 1.5 million former and current civil servants became the first ‘mutual’ organisation in Whitehall. MyCSP Ltd will take over the operation of the state-run pension scheme, but will also be able to expand and bid for new business under the shared-ownership […]
News: Budget cuts see public servants improvise to get training

Public sector workers are being forced to turn to colleagues and the web to boost the skills that they require to take on new responsibilities, after budget cuts have led to workplace training provision being slashed. According to a survey among 1,100 UK public sector workers undertaken by recruitment consultancy, Badenoch & Clark, about 14.5% are […]
News: Whitehall contractor status crackdown mauled for ‘missing the point’

Plans outlined by the chief secretary to the Treasury to crack down on 2,000 senior civil servants who are being paid as if they were contractors rather than staff have been criticised by industry experts. The coalition government started to investigate the issue, which has been branded in some quarters as tax evasion, in February […]
Blog: Why you should beware of video CVs

Following attendance at a recent recruitment industry event, it seems that the idea of using video CVs as a recruitment tool may be coming back into ‘vogue’ – certainly if the number of companies extolling the benefits and trying to sell their systems and software to me are anything to go by. I first encountered video CVs as a concept […]
Blog: What makes a good mayor?

Today, as votes are being cast in London to elect the city’s mayor, and a further 10 English cities vote on whether they wish to have a mayor at all, it’s a good time to contemplate the value and role of a leader and what lessons our business leaders can take from this week’s mayoral elections. […]