HR Practitioner’s Diary: Tribunal teasers

A HR practitioner shares workplace anecdotes, including how to address inappropriate dress codes professionally and a case where an employee strategically handled unwanted sexual harassment from her manager. The diary explores HR challenges from dress code management to workplace misconduct during summer 2005.
Coaching Insight: Coping with stress

Workplace stress can be managed through effective organisation, planning and prioritisation. Coach Graham Alexander shares how senior executives escaped the stress trap by implementing better scheduling, prioritising tasks, and leveraging support networks to achieve work-life balance.
Feature: Beat e-learning inertia

Organizations often struggle with e-learning adoption due to cultural resistance and lack of strategy. This guide outlines key approaches to overcome inertia, including securing senior management support, creating peer support programs, and providing dedicated learning spaces to maximize engagement and program success.
Review: 40 Activities for Training in Self-empowerment

This practical training manual contains 40 structured activities designed to build self-awareness, confidence, and personal responsibility. Divided into eight areas covering self-esteem and interpersonal skills, the exercises can be adapted for management training, teamwork, conflict resolution, and communication courses.
Member wire #105 – HR Diary – Fingers in the till; Maternity dilemmas

HR Zone’s member newswire covers workplace issues including employee theft concerns, maternity leave and pay disputes following stillbirth, and speed-dating recruitment methods. The issue also addresses stress-related disabilities, back pain prevention, and SMP calculations.
Structured learning the CPD way

Continuing professional development (CPD) is a structured cycle of learning and improvement promoted by professional bodies like the CIPD. Through seminars, courses, work experience, and self-directed study, professionals update their skills and knowledge to stay competitive, build confidence, and benefit their organizations.
Payroll Tip: Employee making purchase on company credit card

When an employee uses a company credit card for purchases, the employee is legally liable to the vendor, and the employer’s payment of the bill creates a taxable benefit. This benefit is reportable on form P11D for tax purposes and subject to Class 1 NICs, unless the expense is exclusively for business use.
How Did I Get Here? Corinne Spencer, Towry Law

Corinne Spencer, HR Director at Towry Law Group, shares how she transitioned from operations management into HR and her mission to improve workplace culture. She discusses overcoming challenges in embedding organizational change, managing proactively, and addressing poor management practices that have shaped her commitment to building supportive, high-performing teams.
How to: Employ foreign workers

Employers hiring foreign workers must navigate complex immigration laws and work permit requirements. Recent government proposals introduce a points-based system to streamline recruitment across skill levels, while companies remain responsible for ensuring compliance with Home Office regulations and employment standards.
Editor’s Comment: Hiding behind the arras

Email has empowered people to express themselves boldly online, but this digital courage often bypasses the social restraint of face-to-face interaction. An editor examines whether this “e-boldness” is eroding professional norms, using viral workplace disputes as examples of how email’s anonymity enables behavior people would never attempt in person.
News in Brief: The week in HR – W/C 20/06/05

This week’s HR roundup highlights key challenges facing UK employers: persistent skills shortages are forcing companies to hire and train less experienced staff, with 85% of employers reporting recruitment difficulties. Senior leaders report sleep disruption from work stress, particularly management issues, while new government proposals could jail employers of illegal migrants.
HR Practitioner’s Diary: Fingers in the till

An HR practitioner helps a client investigate and dismiss a company accountant who illegally transferred nearly £10,500 to her personal account on her last day of work, leading to police involvement and summary dismissal for gross misconduct.
What’s the answer? Quashing ‘sickies’

Employers seeking to reduce suspicious absences can issue clear warnings about potential disciplinary action for suspected “sickies,” particularly when sick leave coincides with denied holiday requests. Legal experts recommend combining motivational workplace improvements with formal communication to staff about increased scrutiny of suspicious absenteeism patterns.
Case Law Digest: When expletives get expensive

Employers using aggressive management styles face increased legal risk, as employment tribunals increasingly protect workers from verbal abuse and intimidation. The dismissal of rugby coach Ian Millward for abusive language highlights the importance of proper investigation procedures and progressive discipline before resorting to termination.
Lobbying Tales: Battle on the Eastern front

The Recruitment & Employment Confederation launched an unprecedented lobbying campaign across new EU Member States to defend UK labour market flexibility against the proposed EU Agency Workers Directive, which threatened to impose costly bureaucratic requirements on temporary work arrangements.
CSR and beyond: Should HR care about ‘Non’ & ‘Nee’?

The EU’s rejection of its constitution reveals divergent views on business regulation and the state’s economic role across Europe. HR professionals should understand these philosophical differences, as they shape corporate social responsibility approaches and how businesses operate within their regions.
HR Tip: Is stress a disability?

Stress is considered a disability under the Disability Discrimination Act only if it significantly impacts normal daily activities and lasts or is expected to last at least 12 months. Employers should refer affected employees for medical examination and review job conditions.
Salary errors – recovering overpayments

Employers can recover salary overpayments through Employment Tribunals or civil courts, each with distinct advantages. However, employers must follow proper legal procedures and cannot simply deduct overpayments from final wages without contractual rights or employee consent, or they risk facing unlawful deduction claims.
Review: Buying Information Systems

This book guides managers through selecting, implementing, and assessing off-the-shelf information systems, offering checklists and case studies to structure the purchasing process. While it provides useful frameworks and covers key topics like stakeholder involvement and supplier selection, readers with no prior experience may need additional guidance, and those with experience may find it too high-level.
How Did I Get Here? Mark Burch, Crown Prosecution Service

Mark Burch shares his unconventional career path from bingo caller to Head of Reward and Performance at the Crown Prosecution Service, discussing how his early roles in leisure management and employment services prepared him for managing HR challenges across 8,000 staff members.