Opinion – Page 51

  • Professor Kirk Chang
    Opinion

    Professor Kirk Chang: Are incentives outdated?

    2018-10-05T13:00:01Z

    There are thousands of types of incentives, but they usually fall into three main category bases: holiday, finance and workshop or training.These have been used around the world in various types of organisations, and they all have their positives and negatives. No reward system is perfect, but, in general, they ...

  • Carys Roberts
    Opinion

    Carys Roberts: Should employers encourage a four-day week to increase productivity?

    2018-10-04T05:00:42Z

    Reducing working time would have many benefits for society. Since 2014, more people in the UK have wanted to reduce their working hours than increase them. A reduction in the working week could redistribute hours from those who want to work less, to those who would like to work more. ...

  • Katherine Wilson
    Opinion

    Katherine Wilson: Should employers encourage a four-day week to increase productivity?

    2018-10-04T05:00:29Z

    According to the 2011 census, three million people in the UK combine working with caring for a disabled, seriously ill or older relative or friend. Without the right support, the stress and pressure of juggling work and care can force people to leave their jobs. Indeed, two million people have ...

  • Christine Brotherton
    Opinion

    Christine Brotherton: Should employers encourage a four-day week to increase productivity?

    2018-10-04T05:00:16Z

    It was a world first when Perpetual Guardian announced in February 2018 that we were undertaking an organisation-wide trial, whereby all staff would be asked to do 100% of their work, for 100% of their normal pay, but only over 80% of the standard work week; that is, if they ...

  • Frances O’Grady
    Opinion

    Frances O’Grady: Should employers encourage a four-day week to increase productivity?

    2018-10-03T13:20:41Z

    It is the Trades Union Congress' (TUC) 150th anniversary, and we have marked the occasion by publishing a report, in September 2018, on the future of work.The government estimates that new technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) and robotics could boost UK gross domestic product (GDP) by at least £200 billion ...

  • Hannah Ball
    Opinion

    Hannah Ball: Employers need to consider national minimum wage in conjunction with TUPE employees

    2018-10-02T13:00:49Z

    HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) has changed the way it enforces the national minimum wage following a transfer of employees under the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE).Since 2 July 2018, all national minimum wage liabilities are being enforced against the new employer, whereas previously the old ...

  • rosie gloster
    Opinion

    Rosie Gloster: Embedding flexible working into your organisational culture

    2018-10-02T05:00:26Z

    In some organisations, employees who work flexibly can experience a lack of skills development, or pay and career progression, while workplace cultures and practices can at times leave flexible or part-time employees in isolation.This seems to be a negative outcome of the discord between HR policies and the realities of ...

  • jonathan maude
    Opinion

    Jonathan Maude: The legal perspective on flexible working arrangements

    2018-10-01T15:00:33Z

    'Flexibility' is the buzzword around modern working. If employers do not embrace a flexible working pattern, they are likely to lose talent to competitors, and in the current uncertain market and economic conditions, this is the last thing they can risk. So, employers need to fully embrace flexibility for the ...

  • professor alex bryson
    Opinion

    Professor Alex Bryson: All-employee share plans increase loyalty and productivity

    2018-09-26T15:00:49Z

    Across Britain, around half of all listed organisations run some kind of all-employee stock purchase plan (ESPP), offering workers the opportunity to buy shares in the firm at discounted rates.In How does shared capitalism affect economic performance in the UK?, Bryson and Freeman, 2010, we found plan members behave differently ...

  • Nicola Butterworth
    Opinion

    Nicola Butterworth: Agency Workers Regulations may apply to more businesses than employers think

    2018-09-25T15:15:54Z

    Perhaps the most surprising element of the decision in the recent case of Brooknight Guarding Limited v Matei, published in August 2018, was that the organisation argued it was not a temporary work agency for the purposes of the Agency Workers Regulations 2010 (AWR). On the stark facts of the ...

  • Dr Shainaz Firfiray
    Opinion

    Dr Shainaz Firfiray: How can employers promote employee motivation?

    2018-09-24T13:41:45Z

    Motivating employees is a topic of critical importance to organisations; a motivated workforce is more productive compared to a disengaged group of employees. Meanwhile, a lack of motivation can negatively impact competitiveness, because disengaged employees can transmit skeptical attitudes across an organisation.There are a few measures organisations can take to ...

  • bill alexander
    Opinion

    Bill Alexander: There is more to work than money in the wallet

    2018-09-24T05:00:22Z

    Employers need to adjust their approach to motivation in the workplace and cannot ignore the direct link to performance, productivity and profit.It is fair to say that the majority of today's forward-thinking organisations have motivation strategies in place. However, it appears that many have the wrong approach.It is not just ...

  • Professor Vlatka Hlupic
    Opinion

    Professor Vlatka Hlupic: Mindset and organisational culture can influence job-hopper retention

    2018-09-21T15:00:56Z

    Job-hopping could be a choice, or it might be a necessity. In some cases, people change jobs because they are seeking new challenges, greater growth or extra income. Far too often, however, individuals switch employment because of bad management or poor retention efforts.Many job-hoppers could, therefore, be retained with proactive ...

  • Dr Justin Varney
    Opinion

    Dr Justin Varney: Using technology as an enabler for workplace wellbeing

    2018-09-19T15:33:28Z

    Technology can be an amazing enabler for personal health and wellbeing in the workplace. However, it is only useful if it is used.Many have downloaded apps in a moment of inspiration, or guilt, only for them to collect digital dust after a few days. Although trying each one may help ...

  • Tessa Robinson
    Opinion

    Tessa Robinson: Paid parental bereavement leave continues legislative journey

    2018-09-18T14:08:41Z

    On 8 June 2018, The Employment Lawyers Association (ELA) published its response to the government's consultation on parental bereavement leave. The response will help inform the government as it considers whether grieving parents should be granted the legal right to paid bereavement leave.In March 2018, The Department for Business, Energy ...

  • john lamb
    Opinion

    John Lamb: Assistive technology can create a better workplace for all

    2018-09-12T15:00:29Z

    Organisations with a diverse and inclusive workforce reap vast benefits in terms of access to a wider range of skills, increased staff loyalty and greater customer satisfaction.One key factor in ensuring accessibility in the workplace is the use of assistive technology to enable d6isabled people to work alongside non-disabled colleagues. ...

  • William Clift
    Opinion

    William Clift and Daniel Parker: Brexit and the working time directive - an opportunity for reform?

    2018-09-11T13:36:38Z

    The government has been keen to stress that workplace rights will continue largely as is post-Brexit, including European Union-derived developments such as the working time regulations (WTR).The WTR has embedded the EU’s working time directive (WTD) in UK law, and so, in principle, departure should not have an immediate impact; ...

  • antonia bello
    Opinion

    Antonia Bello: Embracing benefits technology improves employee engagement

    2018-09-10T11:30:12Z

    Benefits technology has developed in leaps and bounds in recent years, and what was once a yearly paper-pushing exercise is now an exciting chance to engage with employees more frequently.At Aspen, we have been careful to craft a benefits package that is not only suitable for the business and our ...

  • dom-manley
    Opinion

    Dom Manley: The technology megatrends that are changing reward, benefits and engagement

    2018-09-10T05:00:21Z

    As technology continues to transform our everyday lives, as well as our working practices and environments, there is surely not a reward professional around now who does not acknowledge the need to address how technology affects the industry.While online benefits technology and new communication methods are increasingly common, there are ...

  • dan lucy
    Opinion

    Dan Lucy: Don’t forget about face-to-face communication

    2018-09-07T15:00:01Z

    The Institute for Employment Studies (IES) highlighted, in The drivers of employee engagement, published in March 2004, that the single most important predictor of employee engagement is a sense of feeling valued and involved, underpinned by opportunities to express ideas, and managers who genuinely listen and value employee contributions.The proliferation ...