Time to get serious about sexual harassment

Time to get serious about sexual harassment

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Time to get serious about sexual harassment

example flexible working arrangement

In December 2022, a new positive duty on employers and persons conducting a business or undertaking (PCBUs) to eliminate workplace sex discrimination and harassment commenced.

The Anti-Discrimination and Human Rights Legislation Amendment (Respect at Work) Act 2022 (Cth) amended the Sex Discrimination Act 1984 (Cth), introducing a positive duty on employers and PCBUs to eliminate:

  • workplace sexual harassment, sex discrimination and sex-based harassment;
  • conduct that amounts to subjecting a person to a hostile workplace environment on the ground of sex; and
  • certain acts of victimisation.

Now employers and Persons Conducting a Business or Undertaking (PCBUs) have a legal obligation to take proactive and meaningful action to prevent all of the above offending behaviours from occurring in the workplace or in connection to work.

This is a big step up from what had been the case where it was a complaints-driven process – action was only required if someone made a complaint after the fact ie after the sexual harassment had already occurred.

Respect@Work  

The Australian Human Rights Commission has established a website with lots of resources to help organisations to learn about sexual harassment and what the positive duty means. See https://www.respectatwork.gov.au.

The first step in the process of exercising your positive duty is to actually understand what the issues are and what your obligations to exercise the positive duty mean in practice. You then need to conduct a risk assessment to ascertain whether there are any risks that need to be eliminated or controlled relative to sexual harassment and the other offensive behaviours noted above.

Above is the risk management model published via Respect@Work which is an adaptation from Safe Work Australia’s model for managing work health and safety risks.

There are two points with this which are important to note:

  • Workers must be consulted at every step in the process and the best results will be obtained by educating and engaging them in the mission to eliminate sexual harassment from your workplace; and
  • This is a continuous process – not something that you just do once and then you have ticked the box. The positive duty means that you must keep assessing risks and the effectiveness of control measures and making necessary adjustments on an ongoing basis.

Please note that sexual harassment also features as one of the psychosocial hazards in respect of which Australian organisations are progressively being required to deal with as a workplace health and safety positive duty.

What is sexual harassment?  

 Australian law states that sexual harassment occurs when:

  • a person makes an unwelcome sexual advance, or an unwelcome request for sexual favours, to the person harassed; or engages in other unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature in relation to the person harassed;
  • in circumstances in which a reasonable person, having regard to all the circumstances, would have anticipated the possibility that the person harassed would be offended, humiliated or intimidated.

Examples of behaviour that constitutes sexual harassment include:

  • inappropriate physical contact;
  • intrusive questions about a person’s private life or physical appearance;
  • sharing or threatening to share intimate images or film without consent;
  • unwelcome touching, hugging, cornering or kissing;
  • repeated or inappropriate invitations to go out on dates;
  • sexually suggestive comments or jokes that offend or intimidate;
  • requests or pressure for sex or other sexual acts;
  • sexually explicit pictures, posters or gifts;
  • actual or attempted rape or sexual assault;
  • being followed, watched or someone loitering;
  • sexually explicit comments made in person or in writing, or indecent messages (SMS, social media), phone calls or emails—including the use of emojis with sexual connotations;
  • sexual gestures, indecent exposure or inappropriate display of the body;
  • unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature that occurs online or via some form of technology—including on virtual meetings;
  • inappropriate staring or leering;
  • repeated or inappropriate advances on email or other online social technologies.

In determining whether an advance, request or other conduct may be sexual in nature, the intention of the alleged harasser is not relevant. An advance, request or other conduct may be sexual in nature even if the person engaging in the conduct does not have a sexual interest in that person or is of a different sexual orientation to the person harassed.

Equally, the behaviour may be unwelcome to a person even if it is accepted or tolerated by others or is part of the culture of the organisation.

As to whether the behaviour offend, intimidates or humiliates someone, that also is a subjective test – it is about the how a person perceives and is affected by the behaviour and about how a reasonable person could expect that to happen.

What are the drivers of sexual harassment? 

There are 4 key drivers of sexual harassment noted on the Respect@Work website. They are:

  1. Condoning of sexual harassment against women (are these behaviours justified, excused or trivialised in your workplace?)
  2. Men’s control of decision making in public and private life (how well represented and how much of a voice do women have in management decisions in your workplace?)
  3. Rigid adherence to gender roles and stereotyped constructions of masculinity and femininity (in your workplace, are there any perspectives that some jobs are best done by men and some best done by women?)
  4. Male peer relations that emphasises aggression and disrespect towards women (in your workplace, is there a culture of sexist language or jokes or commentary that is disrespecting of women?)

The questions posed above are just a few of those you need to be asking.

The Exposures 

From December 2023, the Australian Human Rights Commission will be able to enter workplaces to inspect them for issues of sexual harassment and will be able to initiate prosecutions and penalties of offending employers.

Workplace Health and Safety authorities around the country are progressively becoming able to do likewise via legislation for PCBUs to have a positive duty to eliminate or control psychosocial hazards.

The Fair Work Commission already had a jurisdiction in which workers could seek orders to stop sexual harassment. As from March 2023, they also have a new jurisdiction where workers can take complaints of sexual harassment and seek compensation.

So, yes, it is time to get serious about stamping out sexual harassment.

Note: much of this content has been drawn from the Respect@Work website.

Need help?

  • Give us a call on 1300 108 488 to arrange your free first consultation to see how we can help with advice and support on this or any other HR matter

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Your Swiss Army knife

Your Swiss Army knife

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Your Swiss Army knife

example flexible working arrangement

 

One of the psychosocial hazards that research is showing to be at the forefront of the list that organisations need to address is that of lack of role clarity.

One of the tools that we can use to help to address that is the humble Position Description (PD) which has been around for decades and can be found in lots of different forms. 

In most places where I have worked as an employee or as a consultant, PDs are commonly treated as something we have to have for our quality accreditation or our HR compliance or something that we give people when we advertise a job or when they start employment with us. They are then filed away and forgotten about. 

This is really unfortunate because the PD is a very versatile tool and arguably one of the most powerful in a manager’s toolbox. 

So how can PDs be used to good effect? Here are 5 ways that we have used them.

#1. Compliance satisfaction

Every employer has a statutory duty to ensure that every employee is properly instructed in their duties and has the skills and abilities to perform their tasks safely for themselves and others. This is enshrined in workplace health and safety law and is also an important part of employment law in general.   

The PD is an effective aid to that instruction and skills assessment and enablement. It helps with documentary evidence of satisfaction of the statutory duties that all employers have as well as in dealing with employee grievances and actions against the employer (eg in demonstrating reasonable management action in response to an adverse action or bullying complaint).  

#2. Recruitment effectiveness

If you are going to be effective in recruitment, you first want to know what the attributes required for competent performance of a role are so that you can prepare a fit advertisement. 

You then need to identify selection criteria and the how to assess candidates by considering the attributes required in the role and the best ways to test candidates for those attributes. 

You also want to communicate what attributes are required to candidates (so that the right ones apply).  

A properly constructed PD helps with all of that and assists you to make an informed and evidence-based selection decision.

 #3. Targeted development

The content in PDs that details the skills, knowledge and attributes required provides a great foundation for assessing the technical strengths and weaknesses of an employee and why that is the way they are.  

That, in turn, can lead to targeted development that leverages those strengths or builds on areas of weakness. That will deliver the optimal return on investment in learning and provide the best support and recognition for the individual employee.  

It is also a great aid to onboarding of employees and getting them up and running quickly because their role and responsibilities are clearly communicated and easily understood from day one.

 #4. Performance management

Clearly, if we are going to expect people to perform their roles effectively, we have to tell them what their roles and responsibilities are and what performance standards are expected. A good PD does this and helps employees to be more productive and aligned in performance as a result.

Conversely, when performance management concerns arise, it is very important to go through a methodical, relevant and procedurally fair process that is supported by documentary evidence.  

The PD plays a critical part in this as it describes what is expected of the role the person is performing and the attributes required to meet those expectations. It also provides documentary evidence that the employer has clearly communicated the duties and expectations to the employee.  

Additionally, as with development of employees, the PD can be a useful tool for analysing why an employee might not be meeting expectations eg because they are lacking in some particular attribute (skill, ability or knowledge) required for the role.  

#5. Better employee engagement and wellbeing

Study after study tells us that key elements in good employee engagement and wellbeing practice include: 

  • giving people clarity about their roles and the expectations of them
  • providing the support that they need as an individual to be successful in their roles
  • having clear meaning and purpose in the work that they do and
  • feeling psychologically safe by feeling included and informed and involved in their work, in their relationships and in their team.

 A well-structured PD helps with all of these factors when all of the PD purposes outlined above are part of everyday practice in organisations.

 So that is why I think of the PD as the HR Swiss Army Knife – it can be used constructively in so many different ways. 

 Of course, it is just a tool and there are many others in the HR toolkit that need to be used to deliver best practice in People and Culture management.

Do you need to reimagine how you use PDs in your business?

How can we help?

We can provide you with tools like Position Descriptions and coaching in how to apply these tools effectively to control psychosocial hazards, otherwise meet your compliance obligations and build better communications and employee engagement.

If you want to know more, give us a call on 0438 533 311.



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Why would I want to work for you?

Why would I want to work for you?

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Why would I want to work for you?

great resignation

We are hearing a lot of business owners asking the question: “Where can I find the people I need for my business?”

Attracting and retaining the people we need is one of the greatest challenges that we have in business today.

The pandemic has had dramatic effects on the labour market in a number of ways:

  • Closed borders have meant that overseas students, backpackers and other migrant workers have not been here
  • Industries such as hospitality and tourism are ones that were hard hit and workers who had been stood down went looking for more secure work, found it and aren’t going back
  • Others which were under the pump like our essential services and frontline workers were stretched to breaking point and many have left to find less stressful work
  • People have moved to regional areas or interstate to get out of lockdown areas and to improve life balance
  • With work from home orders giving people the opportunity to do that, many have found that they like that and they want to keep doing it
  • Conversely, there are some who don’t want to work from home but would prefer to return to the office and finally
  • The pandemic has caused people to rethink what is important to them in life and where work fits in their lives and that impacts on their job choices.

As a result of all of these factors, the labour market is more competitive than it has ever been.

So how do you optimally position your business to be a preferred employer in these challenging times?

What do you have to offer when that potential employee asks the question: “Why would I want to work for you?”

What difference has the pandemic made to the answers to that question?

There have been numerous studies and surveys undertaken on what people want in their workplace and their career.
Generally, we shouldn’t be surprised with what these tell us – they are pretty obvious, when you think about it – people want:

  1. The opportunity to deploy their skills and talents on work that they enjoy
  2. The contribution that they make in their work to serve a purpose – to give meaning to their lives
  3. A sense of belonging in working for an organisation that they feel part of and can feel proud of
  4. Recognition for the work that they do in both monetary and self-esteem terms
  5. Flexibility that enables them to balance work commitments with other elements of their lives
  6. A sense of fairness and respect in the inclusion and behaviour of people in the organisation (ie everyone gets a fair go) and
  7. Trust in their employer, their boss and their colleagues to support them in their role, relationships and wellbeing.

These have always been important elements of a positive workplace culture, but the impact of the pandemic has amplified them.

Additionally, when it is an employee’s labour market as is very much the case today, candidates can pick and choose based on their personal preference set.

The challenges for employers

To be successful in today’s job market, an employer must have a valid and attractive Employer Value Proposition (EVP) which clearly answers that question: “Why would I want to work for you?”

For many business owners and managers, this requires a real mind shift – to open your mind up to new ways of working and new ways of leading and managing your people.

What flexibilities can you offer people in relation to when, where and perhaps even how they work in the role that you need filled?

While you might ideally want people to return full-time to the office, have a think about why you want that. Is it because that works best for you (because it is the way it was pre-pandemic) or is it because it is best for your people and, for that matter, the business?

Perhaps a hybrid arrangement could work – some time in the office with some time working at home or at a remote hub like a coworking space near the employee’s home.

Then there is that question of what your EVP is. Do you know?

One of the more remarkable things that we have found over the years is that 80% of job ads don’t actually give you a reason to apply for them and don’t differentiate from their competition at all.

If “people are your greatest asset” as is so often said, why don’t most job ads reflect that?

Again, you need to open your mind to where you are most likely to find the skills that you are looking for and what might be important to them in a role.

For example, a number of years ago we assisted a client with recruitment of a part-time administrative person, They started thinking of the role as 3 days a week for a full day.

Then we talked about where they would be likely to find the right person and what they had to offer someone in that segment of the labour market.

The business was in a quality suburban shopping strip with a good supermarket, a chemist, a dry cleaner and the other traders that you normally find in these places. There was a tram that stopped out the front of the office and there was nearby free parking. It was ideal for a parent with school children to work during school hours and get the other daily stuff done like picking up something for dinner or getting that script filled or the dry cleaning done. That meant that the kids could be picked up and taken home without any detours.

So they decided to reconfigure the hours for the job accordingly – 9.30 to 2.30 on 5 days per week.

They pitched it that way and got what they wanted because they thought about what a candidate would be looking for in the context of their personal needs. They crafted the role to fit that.

What is your EVP?

If you look at the 7 factors above, which of those give you a strategic advantage over your labour market competitors?

Then consider ways that you can:

  • Define your value proposition (be clear about what you offer and why it is of value) taking into account the specific market that you are likely to find people in
  • Articulate your value proposition (how do you leverage that to attract and retain the people that you need) and
  • Present it engagingly and authentically, making sure that it is real – you won’t keep people long if they find that the rhetoric didn’t fit with the reality.

Your people are a great resource for this.

Part of opening your mind up is about looking at how you interact with your people and how they might contribute in different ways to support the business.

Your people will have things that they value about working for you and they will also have ideas on what isn’t working so well or things that could help to attract and retain the people you need.

So ask them what they think. Run ideas that you have past them to see what they think.

Optimise the relationships with your people by really making them feel that their opinions and work contributions are both valued.

Would any of your employees be good ambassadors for your business (eg they might be happy to be in a video telling the public why they love working in your business)?

We know how effective customer testimonials can be for sales of our products or services – why wouldn’t testimonials by your staff work as well?

If you would like some assistance in developing your EVP so that you can position your business as an Employer of Choice – for real – we can help.

 

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Is an enterprise agreement the answer?

Is an enterprise agreement the answer?

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Is an enterprise agreement the answer?

Wouldn’t it be great if you could simplify compliance with modern awards and related matters?

If you could tailor content to your workplace?

If you could have everyone on the same terms of employment?

Guess what – you can do all of those things and more in an enterprise agreement.

What is an enterprise agreement?

An enterprise agreement is an agreement made between an employer and a group of employees on wages and conditions of employment for that group of employees.

They can be made with all or some employees in a particular enterprise and have to be approved by the Fair Work Commission.

They can incorporate modern awards that have application to the group of employees or they can exclude those modern awards, totally replacing them.

How are they made?

The process starts with the issue of a Notice of Representational Rights which informs the employees concerned that their employer wants to make an enterprise agreement and that they have the right to be represented in negotiation of that agreement.

Employees nominate one or more people to represent them and they can nominate themselves if they wish to.

If an employee is a member of a union, the union has default bargaining rights unless that employee nominates someone else as their bargaining representative.

The employer and employee representatives then develop a draft agreement and, when it has got to stage where there is a reasonable level of confidence that people are OK with it, a vote of employees is organised.

If a majority of the employees who vote, vote in favour of it, it is approved subject to certification by the Fair Work Commission.

What happens at the Fair Work Commission?

A copy of the signed agreement together with an Application to Approve an Enterprise Agreement (Form F16) and a Statutory Declaration (Form F17) and various other documents are filed with the Fair Work Commission.

The Commissioner who deals with it is then primarily concerned with the following questions:

  1. Whether the Agreement satisfies the Better Off Overall Test i.e. employees are better off under the Agreement than they would be under the relevant modern award(s).
  2. Whether the group of people covered by the agreement does not unfairly exclude other employees and
  3. Whether the Agreement has been fairly made i.e. the correct process has been followed, people have been properly consulted, prescribed timelines observed and people have been properly informed about the effects of making the Agreement on their wages and terms of employment before they voted on it

If the Commissioner has any concerns, an undertaking might be required or submissions might be invited for consideration.

Once the Commissioner can answer “yes” to the 3 questions noted above, the Agreement can be formally approved and legally takes effect from 7 days after the date of that approval.

Reasons for doing an enterprise agreement

There are a variety of very good reasons that might apply depending on the particular award coverage and the circumstances of the business. These include:

  1. Simplification: modern awards try to cover whole industries or particular occupations across multiple industries and we often find that much of the content in modern awards has little or any relevance to particular businesses. So we can trim it back to what is relevant.
  2. Flexibility: all modern awards have Individual Flexibility Clauses which allow some flexibility with existing employees in a limited range of matters and Facilitative Provisions which also allow some room for negotiation on some things. However, they won’t necessarily provide the sorts of flexibilities that employees might want and the employer is happy to offer and that can be addressed through an enterprise agreement.
  3. Customisation: modern awards are largely a one size fits all approach and we know that one size doesn’t fit all. For example, classification structures in modern awards are often difficult to apply to a particular business because they lack definition or they just don’t make sense. In most cases, they were developed decades ago and really don’t take account of technological and other changes to the way we work and the skills that we use today. If you pay people sufficiently above award, you can make your own structure that makes sense for your business and your people.
  4. Fairness: some modern awards have specific provisions which are just unfair for employer and employees. For example, modern awards which have Industry Specific Redundancy provisions allow an employee who resigns after at least one year’s service to receive a redundancy payment of up to 8 weeks while an employee who is retrenched after more than 5 years’ service gets less under the modern award than they would under the National Employment Standards that apply to most other employees. With an enterprise agreement, you can put everyone on the same footing with things like that.
  5. Protection: for some businesses, having an enterprise agreement of your own offers protection from coercion to enter into an enterprise agreement with a union which would force you to pay your workers at major project rates on all of the work that you do. That can make your business uncompetitive for other work. If you are in such an industry and have a non-unionised workforce who are happy to be that way, your own enterprise agreement can help you to get the right balance in paying higher rates on major project work and at lower levels on other work. Equally, a head contactor on a major project would likely want your business to have an enterprise agreement so as to avoid industrial relations disruptions to the project. All enterprise agreements are published on the Fair Work Commission’s website and you can use that to publicly demonstrate your employer value proposition to prospective employees because it is locked in by law.

Conclusions

The process for making an enterprise agreement is complicated and the Fair Work Commission’s approach to them is complex. Additionally, individual Commissioners can have their own way of dealing with them.

That means that you do need professional assistance in developing and implementing one and we can assist with that. Equally, if any of the scenarios described above fit your business situation, it can be a very worthwhile exercise that can deliver real positive change in workplace flexibility, fairness
and employee engagement.

If any of this is of interest to you, take advantage of our free first consultation to explore your options and how we can help.

CONTACT US

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ABN : 24 091 644 094

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Fight sexual harassment with HEART

Fight sexual harassment with HEART

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Fight sexual harassment with HEART

great resignation

In a much publicised address at the National Press Club this week, Brittany Higgins and Grace Tame have called for a positive duty to be placed on employers to prevent sex discrimination, sexual harassment and victimisation.

Ms Higgins said: “If you can model the correct behaviour within your workplace, it drives it forward and it puts the onus onto other businesses in and across Australia to actually take the issue seriously.”

This is a significant step beyond what Australian employers are currently legally obliged to do.

Last September, the federal parliament passed the Sex Discrimination and Fair Work (Respect at Work) Amendment Act 2021. That legislation essentially did 3 things:

  1. Introduced definitions of “sexually harass” and “sexually harassed at work”
  2. Created a new or expanded jurisdiction for the Fair Work Commission to allow it to make orders to stop sexual harassment at work just as it could already issue orders to stop bullying at work”
  3. Including sexual harassment in the definition of serious misconduct which justifies summary dismissal

See our earlier blog on these changes and their implications for employers.

What has been the experience with stop bullying orders?

In the last 6 years, the FWC has received between 721 and 820 stop bullying applications each year. That is representative of approximately 0.006% of the Australian workforce which is extremely low given that Safe Work Australia’s own research puts the proportion of Australian workers who experience bullying at around 10% and others cite significantly higher numbers.  According to Heads Up, it is estimated that bullying costs Australian organisations between $6 billion and $36 Billion per year.

So what the FWC sees is (at best) about 0.06% of the people who are experiencing bullying. That is literally just the tip of the iceberg and clear evidence that the jurisdiction is having little impact on workplace culture.

Will the experience with stop sexual harassment orders be any different?

Last November, the Fair Work Commission’s  new jurisdiction for applications for orders to stop sexual harassment came into operation.

As noted above, it is to operate in much the same way as the stop bullying jurisdiction and we couldn’t reasonably expect it to have any more impact on the prevalence of sexual harassment than that jurisdiction has had on the incidence of bullying.

The first application made for stop sexual harassment orders was made against two workers of a neighbouring business. It was dismissed in December for want of jurisdiction because that neighbouring business moved out so there was no longer a threat of the applicant having contact with or being sexual harassed by them.

This decision confirms that there needs to be an ongoing risk of bullying or sexual harassment to obtain a stop order from the FWC.

Why doesn’t it work?

Ms Higgins and Ms Tame are absolutely right that change will only occur in real terms if employers take responsibility for changing organisational behaviour rather than just having control measures for mitigation of risk.

In our workplaces, we need to do much more than just apply the traditional WHS risk management approach of having a policy, telling people about it, requiring them to follow it and disciplining them if they don’t. That doesn’t change language, it doesn’t change culture and it doesn’t change behaviour.

The “Stop Bullying” and “Stop Sexual Harassment” processes are really not designed to prevent improper conduct – rather they are there to stop it after it has already been occurring.

They are also totally reliant on an aggrieved worker making a complaint to the Fair Work Commission.

Most workers wouldn’t know that those jurisdictions exist let alone have the confidence to access them.

We also know that most instances of bullying or sexual harassment go unreported and that, for many who are economically reliant on the wage that they bring home every week, rocking the boat with a complaint of bullying or sexual harassment isn’t an attractive prospect.

And then there are those who are able to find somewhere else to work and they just move on to get away from the problem.

How having a HEART helps

If you want to really address these behavioural problems in your workplace, our HEART model can help:

H is for HONESTY:

Accept what statistics tell us – that some form of sexual harassment is more than likely happening in your workplace and/or to your people.  Take a good hard look at your workplace to identify any practices or behaviours that might not be quite right and think about your people to identify those who are perhaps likely to be perpetrators (whether knowingly or not) or victims.

E is for ENGAGEMENT:

Engage everyone in the organisation in the conversation through appropriate policies and procedures, training and promotions and building gender equality and respectful behaviour into your management processes, performance management  and KPIs. Also have the conversations with those people who have been identified as risks and support them in areas that they need to work on and don’t permit exceptions.

A is for ACCOUNTABILITY:

Hold everyone accountable for playing their part in the desired culture ensuring that the principles are applied to all individuals and teams and with no bystanders. Where improvements are needed for anyone, make that a corrective action for them to take on board as part of their performance plan.

R is for REVIEW:

Ensure that there is constant vigilance and that you regularly consult and check in with people to verify what is working  well and where there might be opportunities for improvement. Implement a coaching model which includes regular catch ups and discussion of relationships, values and behaviours – how they are going, what is working well and what could be better.

T is for TRUST:

Create an environment that is psychologically safe for people to put their hands up and seek an ear or a hand with any challenges that they are having – with someone else’s behaviour or their own.  Ensure that you are responsive and people believe in the integrity of both the process and management.

Conclusion

The only way that we are going to eliminate sexual harassment and bullying from our workplaces is to take responsibility ourselves to change the attitudes and behaviours that drive them.

Governments can’t do it, unions can’t do it, institutions like the Fair Work Commission can’t do it. The only ones who can do it are the people in those workplaces and it is really up to all of us to play our part in that.

Leaders need to take a stand and show that they have the HEART to take on the challenge of transforming their workplace cultures to be respectful, welcoming, inclusive and psychologically safe for everyone in reality and not just on paper.

Our PosWork Better Workplace Projects are a great place to start and we would be happy to help.

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The Great Resignation – fact or fiction?

The Great Resignation – fact or fiction?

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The Great Resignation – fact or fiction?

great resignation

We have been hearing a lot about this – the Great Resignation – from the USA where people are reported to be leaving their employers in droves and businesses are having to up the ante with their employment offerings.

This is perfectly understandable in the USA for a number of reasons.

Firstly, people did not get the sort of support that we got here in Australia with JobKeeper and other government grants and subsidies.

We also have a host of employment protections that Americans do not have because their workforce is much more casualised than ours and they also have lesser legislated employment conditions.

And they had much higher COVID infection rates (at the time of writing, the USA had 74 million infections (about 22% of the population) as compared to Australia’s 2.5 million cases (less than 10% of the population) .

Those factors mean that the experience of American workers through the pandemic has been very different to ours.

One thing that workers world wide will have been doing through the pandemic is having a good hard look at their working life from a couple of perspectives – what sort of employer they work for and what place work should take in their lives.

This is happening in Australia too and we are seeing people leaving employers for six main reasons:

  1. They want greater flexibility in the way they work.
  2. They have moved away from cities to get out of and minimise future potential for lockdowns.
  3. They have the opportunity to move to more secure work or a different industry where they see career opportunities.
  4. They have been working in industries like healthcare and aged care and childcare and education where people have been under pressure for a long time and burnout has become commonplace.
  5. They were unhappy with their treatment by their employer during the pandemic and have the opportunity to do better.
  6. They have opted to retire or just opt out of the workforce.

Of course, there are also the minority who have chosen not to get vaccinated.

The labour market is the tightest that it has been for decades – it is really hard to attract any applicants let alone good ones.

A primary reason for this is the border closures and the impact that has had with no international students, migrant workers or backpackers available especially for industries like hospitality and agriculture/horticulture which have been reliant ion these workers for years.

The border closures also impact seriously on occupations where we have skills shortages – like engineers, tradespeople and accountants to name a few. 

So it is what you might call “the perfect storm” that must be navigated to attract and retain talent.

So will this current labour crisis be further exacerbated by the predicted “Great Resignation” hitting our shores?

We think that the opposite is the case – that one of the reasons that we are struggling to find candidates for good jobs is that people are staying put.

Most employers and employees have tried to do the right thing by each other during the pandemic and lockdowns and work restrictions. There is a bit of loyalty that goes with that experience. Plus, given the still insecure environment that we are in as a nation, why would you leave the security of your current job where you know what it is like, you have established relationships, you know what the rules are and you have your leave entitlements etc as an insurance policy if things do go downhill with the pandemic?

So the better question is “how do you get that person you need to see better opportunity and security with you?”

The lesson we can take from the USA is that, albeit that our labour market situation has different causes, it is time to get proactive with your employee value proposition and your labour marketing strategy. 

If you would like to see how we can help you to do that, give us a call on 0438 533 311 or email enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au.

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Ridgeline Human Resources Pty Ltd
ABN : 24 091 644 094

enquiries@ridgelinehr.com.au

0438 533 311

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