Report finds link between management input and training quality

pp_default1

A report by the Broadcast Training and Skills Regulator finds that training quality depends more on management commitment and organizational culture than on company budget or size. The assessment revealed that broadcasters with strong leadership involvement in learning and development achieved the highest performance across all areas.

£10m women’s skills project kicks off

pp_default1

A £10m national initiative launched by Karren Brady aims to improve skills and career prospects for up to 10,000 women across nine sectors with skills shortages. The Women & Work Project offers training and support to help women progress into better-paid roles and senior positions.

Twelve top tips for recruitment

pp_default1

Learn 12 essential recruitment tips from a chartered occupational psychologist. Improve your hiring process by defining job requirements clearly, targeting the right candidates, choosing appropriate assessment methods, and avoiding common interview pitfalls.

University Trading games. Recruitment the winner?

pp_default1

BullBearings offers simulated trading games for universities and societies, combining financial learning with competition. Recruiters can access a growing database of numerate graduates through sponsorship opportunities, with memberships expected to exceed 40,000 next season.

Business travellers lack confidence

pp_default1

Half of business travellers lack confidence in their company’s emergency support, with over half expecting the world to become more dangerous in the next five years. Many travellers also fail to research destinations or know who to contact during emergencies, while most companies lack clear travel security policies.

The recruitment revolution – how the net has changed the rules

pp_default1

The internet has transformed recruitment by offering instant candidate responses and direct interaction, decimating traditional agency profits and job advertising revenues. Companies now use online job boards, corporate websites, and automated talent management systems to streamline hiring, with online recruitment accounting for significant portions of recruitment advertising budgets.

HR tip: Garden leave

pp_default1

Garden leave is a strategy where employers keep departing employees on full pay but require them to remain at home during working hours, preventing them from immediately joining competitors while maintaining their employment contract. This approach balances business protection with employee rights.

Ministers promise to cut red tape

pp_default1

The UK government unveiled a regulatory reform programme aimed at reducing red tape for businesses. Ministers will pressure regulators to review unnecessary burdens, simplify health and safety costs for low-risk firms, and improve communication around regulatory changes through twice-yearly implementation dates.

Colborn’s Corner: Can you train for honesty?

pp_default1

The BBC plans to train 16,000 employees in editorial integrity following competition fraud scandals, but questions remain about whether integrity can truly be taught through training rather than fostered through organizational culture and leadership example.

Race victim awarded £42,500

pp_default1

A Muslim street warden has been awarded £42,500 after enduring four years of racial abuse and bullying from colleagues at security firm Chubb. Iqbal Rasheed, who patrolled London’s West End, faced taunts about his faith and Ramadan fasting, eventually resigning in 2004 when management failed to address his complaints.

The trust dimension

pp_default1

Trust cannot be built through tactical behaviors or simple formulas. Sally Bibb explains why genuine trust requires it to be a core value rather than a strategic tool, and how leaders who treat trust as authentic rather than performative build lasting credibility.

Turning pressure to your advantage

pp_default1

High-performing leaders thrive under pressure by developing resilience to vulnerability and maintaining a positive mindset that prevents stress-induced burnout. This foundational quality enables leaders to respond effectively to challenges while influencing stakeholders and sustaining organizational competitive advantage.

Pizza outlet shamed in ‘minus-payslip’ scandal

pp_default1

Young Hungarian workers at Domino’s Pizza franchises face exploitation through excessive charges for vehicles, housing, and living expenses, resulting in negative paychecks. The Mirror investigation reveals a debt-trap system described as “modern day slavery” by unions, with workers sacked after seeking union support.

The PC program that looks after your back

pp_default1

PostureMinder is a British software program that uses a USB camera and visual analysis to monitor computer users’ posture, alerting them when they slump and reminding them to take breaks. Designed to prevent back pain, RSI, and other work-related injuries, the program costs £59.99 for individual users with bulk pricing available for organizations.

Gender equality will take generations

pp_default1

Achieving gender equality will require generations of change, according to the Equal Opportunities Commission, which warns that systemic workplace and institutional barriers designed for an era when women stayed home continue to fuel significant gaps in pay, pensions, safety, and career advancement.

Bullies attack victims by email

pp_default1

One in five UK workers have experienced email bullying, with costs to employers reaching £2 billion annually in sick pay and lost productivity. The survey also found that many employees lack clear guidance on addressing workplace bullying.

Discrimination cases soar

pp_default1

Sexual and racial discrimination cases filed with the Employment Tribunal Service surged dramatically in 2006, with sexual discrimination claims rising to 14,250 and racial discrimination claims reaching 4,103. The Chartered Management Institute has released new guidelines to help organizations combat discrimination through diversity initiatives and management practices.

Royal Mail plans to axe final salary pension exposed

pp_default1

Royal Mail faces pressure to overhaul its final salary pension scheme, with leaked proposals suggesting employees work five years longer and accept reduced retirement benefits to address a £6 billion fund shortfall. The changes would close final salary schemes to new members and potentially cut some pensions by half.

Discrimination enters a new age. By Louise Druce

pp_default1

Nine months after new age discrimination laws took effect in the workplace, companies are already facing hundreds of claims and potential penalties. Many employers lack understanding of compliance requirements, leaving them vulnerable to costly legal action.

Newsletter Registration

Click X (right) to close.

"*" indicates required fields

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Name*
Email*
Privacy*
Additional Options