Supporting Good Practice in Managing Employee Relations The Start of the Employment Relationship Building successful employment relationships is important. It also makes good business sense: Organisations with good employment relationships tend to be more successful. Establishing and maintaining good faith relationships is the foundation to a successful business. Good faith generally involves using practical common sense and treating others in the way you would like to be treated
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Supporting Good Practice in Managing Employment Relations – A Guidance Leaflet The Impact of Employment Law at the START of the employment relationship 2 Internal Factors which can impact on the employment relationship • Policies & Procedures in place within the organisation – this is an important internal factor that can have an impact on the employment relationship; for example if there is job share/flexible working arrangements in place this can help to promote a work-life balance
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SUPPORTING GOOD PRACTICE IN MANAGING EMPLOYMENT RELATIONS GUIDANCE LEAFLET 1. The impact of employment law at the start of the employment relationship 1.1. 2 internal and 2 external factors that impact on the employment relationship A number of factors can have an impact on the relationship between employees and employers which can be identified as internal and external factors. • Internal factors include: o Pay and Rewards – pay and rewards attract‚ motivate and retain staff
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Activity A: (2847 Words) 1. The impact of employment law at the start of the employment relationship A. Internal and 2 external factors that impact on the employment relationship The best and most productive organizations have a very content workforce that all pull in the same direction. Therefore it is essential that a business identifies any issues that can impact on employee relations as soon as possible. There are a number of factors both internal and external that can influence these relationships;
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Discuss a historical turning point in New Zealand Employment Relations. “Parliament‚ in the last 100 years or so‚ has a lot to say about conditions of work and the relationship between employers and their employees” (Deeks & Rasmussen‚ 2006). There have been many industrial disputes regarding the arbitration system between 1894 and 1991 which has influenced changes to New Zealand Employment Relations. One of the many industrial disputes was the waterfront industrial dispute 1951. This dispute in
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in some situations. It helps management and employees to understand more about the workplace issues and other factors that could affect a business. Moreover‚ this could help to build up trust between employees and managers and therefore workplace relations could be improved. In the UK workplace‚ there are forms of employee representation which are trade union‚ non-trade union and indirect representative participation. As for the UK is ‘lightly regulated’ in employee representation is being concerned
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Employee relations may be defined as those policies and practices which are concerned with the management and regulation of relationships between the organisation‚ the individual staff member‚ and groups of staff within the working environment. The objective of the policies and practices are to create • An effective mechanism for communication and participation • A safe and secure work environment • Commitment for the employer and motivation for the employees Employment relationships are built
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explaining the state of industrial conflict in Singapore presently. An employment relation is the relationship between managers and employees in an organisation which is usually informal – for example‚ between supervisors and subordinates. At the industrial level‚ the relationship between the management of an organisation and its union is more formal and referred as industrial relation which is a subset of employment relations (Tan‚ 2007). Industrial conflict is the total range of behaviour and
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the book Labour Relations in the Global Fast Food Industry (Royle & Towers 2002) and its key findings the product of the authors’ ideological frame of reference? Or is it the product of genuine‚ objective research? Introduction Employment relations is the study of all aspect of work and the interaction between the management and the employees or the employee’s representative such as the Union (Ackers and Wilkinson‚ 2005). The underlying beliefs of employment or labour relations are often implicit
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Supporting Good Practice in Managing Employment Relations (3MER) Supporting Good Practice in Managing Employment Relations (3MER) Employee Relations management(3MER) Content 1.1 Internal and external factors that influence employee relations 1.2 Types of employment status 1.3 The importance of employment status 1.1 The importance of work life balance and legislation that influence it 1.2 Legal support for employees as a family member 1.3 The importance of equality pay 1.4 Legislation
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