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When to Use External HR Support

External HR support is not only for emergencies

Many employers wait until something has gone wrong before asking for HR support. A grievance lands, a disciplinary issue escalates, sickness absence becomes unmanageable, or a restructure needs to happen quickly. External HR can help in those moments, but it can also prevent them.

The right support gives leaders a calm, experienced sounding board for people decisions before they become expensive problems.

Use external HR when risk is high

Some situations carry more risk than others. Dismissals, grievances, discrimination concerns, whistleblowing, redundancy, long-term sickness absence and workplace investigations all need careful handling. Getting the process wrong can damage trust and expose the business to claims.

External HR support can help structure the process, prepare documents, coach managers and keep decisions evidence-led.

Use it when managers need confidence

Line managers often know there is a problem but are unsure how to address it. They may delay difficult conversations, over-personalise the issue or jump too quickly to formal action. HR support can give them the wording, process and confidence to act appropriately.

This is especially useful in SMEs, where managers may not have had formal people management training.

Use it to build foundations

External HR is also useful when the business needs structure: contracts, handbooks, policies, onboarding, probation, performance processes, absence management and manager routines. These foundations make everyday decisions easier and reduce inconsistency.

Good HR infrastructure should support the business, not slow it down.

Use it during growth or change

Growth creates people pressure. Roles change, informal habits stop working, managers become stretched and expectations need to be clearer. Change also creates uncertainty, which can affect engagement and performance.

External HR can help leaders design people processes that fit the organisation’s stage rather than copying corporate bureaucracy.

Choose commercially minded support

HR advice should be legally aware, but it also needs to understand commercial reality. Employers need options, risk levels and practical recommendations — not generic policy recitals.

The People Powered provides senior, practical HR support for employers who need confident people decisions without unnecessary complexity.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Managing Conflict at Work Before It Becomes a Grievance

Conflict rarely disappears by being ignored

Workplace conflict can begin quietly: a strained relationship, a blunt email, a disagreement about workload, or a manager and employee interpreting the same conversation differently. If it is ignored, it can harden into grievance, absence, disengagement or resignation.

Early intervention is one of the most useful employee relations skills a manager can develop.

Separate the issue from the noise

Conflict often comes with emotion, history and assumptions. The first task is to understand what the actual issue is. Is it workload, communication style, role clarity, behaviour, trust, performance, or a decision the employee believes is unfair?

Without that clarity, managers can end up treating symptoms rather than causes.

Use informal resolution where appropriate

Not every conflict needs a formal grievance. Where the matter is suitable, informal resolution can be quicker, less adversarial and better for future working relationships. This might involve a facilitated conversation, manager mediation, clarified expectations or an agreed way of working.

However, informal resolution should not be used to minimise serious concerns such as harassment, discrimination or whistleblowing. Those may require formal handling.

Managers need to listen properly

Employees escalate concerns when they feel dismissed. Listening does not mean agreeing with everything. It means taking the concern seriously, asking questions, checking understanding and explaining what will happen next.

A calm, respectful response can reduce the temperature even where the employer cannot give the employee everything they want.

Document agreements

If an informal conversation leads to agreed actions, write them down. This might include communication expectations, workload changes, review dates or behavioural commitments. Documentation prevents misunderstanding and gives managers something to follow up.

It also helps if the matter later becomes formal.

Know when to move formal

If the issue is serious, repeated, unresolved or involves allegations that require investigation, a formal grievance process may be appropriate. The employee should understand how to raise a grievance and what the process involves.

The People Powered helps employers resolve workplace conflict, manage grievances and support managers through sensitive employee relations issues.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Dealing with this in your business?

Our Employee Relations Support gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

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Employee Engagement That Goes Beyond Surveys

Engagement is not the survey score

Employee engagement is often reduced to an annual survey. Surveys can be useful, but they are only a diagnostic tool. They do not create engagement by themselves.

Real engagement is visible in energy, trust, contribution and commitment. Employees understand what the organisation is trying to achieve, know how their work matters, and believe managers will act fairly.

Start with clarity

People disengage when the direction is unclear or constantly shifting without explanation. Leaders do not need to share every confidential detail, but they should communicate priorities, decisions and changes honestly.

Clarity helps employees make better decisions and reduces the noise that comes from uncertainty.

Managers make or break engagement

The line manager relationship is one of the strongest influences on employee experience. A manager who gives feedback, listens, follows up and treats people consistently can create engagement even during challenging periods. A manager who avoids conversations or plays favourites can damage it quickly.

Investing in manager capability is therefore engagement work, not just training.

Feedback must lead somewhere

Asking employees for feedback and then doing nothing is worse than not asking. It creates cynicism. If a business runs a survey or listening exercise, it should explain what was heard, what will change and what cannot change right now.

Employees do not expect every request to be accepted. They do expect honesty and follow-through.

Look at the everyday systems

Engagement is affected by workload, recognition, progression, fairness, communication, flexibility, pay, tools and team dynamics. Sometimes the issue is not motivation; it is friction. Employees may be willing, but blocked by poor processes, unclear roles or constant firefighting.

Organisational development work can remove those barriers and improve performance at the same time.

Build engagement into routines

Regular one-to-ones, team meetings, recognition, development conversations and manager check-ins often matter more than one annual engagement initiative. The rhythm tells employees whether people management is taken seriously.

The People Powered supports employers with engagement diagnostics, manager capability, organisational development and practical action planning.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Dealing with this in your business?

Our Retained HR Advisory gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

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Onboarding New Employees: Why the First 90 Days Matter

Onboarding starts before day one

Recruitment does not end when the offer is accepted. The period between offer and start date shapes the employee’s first impression of the organisation. Silence, confusion or missing paperwork can create doubt before the employee has even arrived.

Good onboarding starts with clear communication, timely contracts, practical joining information and a warm introduction to what the employee can expect.

The first week should reduce uncertainty

New employees are trying to understand the role, the people, the systems and the unwritten rules. A strong first week gives them structure. That might include a welcome meeting, role overview, equipment, system access, key policies, introductions and a simple plan for the first few days.

The goal is not to overwhelm the employee. It is to remove avoidable uncertainty.

Managers are central to onboarding

HR can create the process, but managers create the experience. The line manager should explain expectations, priorities, communication preferences and how success will be measured. They should also check in regularly rather than assuming silence means everything is fine.

Many early employment issues arise because the employee and manager never properly aligned expectations.

Use probation properly

Probation should not be a passive waiting period. It should be an active review process with clear milestones. If there are concerns, they should be raised early and documented. If support is needed, it should be offered. If the employee is doing well, that should be acknowledged too.

A probation review at the end of the period is far less useful if there have been no conversations along the way.

Build connection and belonging

Employees are more likely to stay where they feel useful, informed and included. Onboarding should therefore include cultural and relational elements, not only tasks. Who should the employee know? How does the team work? What behaviours are valued?

Belonging is not created by a welcome slide. It is created by consistent, human contact.

Review the onboarding process

Employers should ask new starters what worked and what was missing. Patterns in feedback can reveal gaps in communication, training or manager confidence.

The People Powered helps employers design onboarding and probation processes that improve retention, performance and employee experience.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Dealing with this in your business?

Our HR Compliance, Policies & Contracts gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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Workplace Investigations: Getting the Facts Before Decisions

Investigations protect the quality of decisions

When a complaint, allegation or serious concern arises, employers often feel pressure to act quickly. Speed matters, but acting without a proper understanding of the facts can create bigger problems.

A workplace investigation helps the employer establish what happened, what evidence exists and whether further action is needed. It is a foundation for fair decision-making.

Be clear about the purpose

An investigation is not a disciplinary hearing and should not decide the outcome. Its purpose is to gather relevant information. The investigator should understand the issues they are being asked to explore and the questions that need answering.

Clear terms of reference can help, especially for complex matters such as bullying allegations, discrimination complaints, whistleblowing concerns or serious misconduct.

Choose the right investigator

The investigator should be sufficiently independent and capable. In smaller businesses, that can be difficult because managers may already know the people involved. External support can help where neutrality, sensitivity or complexity is a concern.

The investigator does not need to be a lawyer, but they do need to be fair, organised and able to assess evidence objectively.

Gather evidence carefully

Evidence may include documents, emails, messages, CCTV, rota records, policies, witness statements and interviews. The investigator should consider evidence that supports and challenges the allegation. A one-sided investigation is rarely safe.

Witnesses should understand the importance of honesty and confidentiality, while also being told that absolute confidentiality cannot always be guaranteed.

Interview with structure

Investigation meetings should be planned. Questions should be open enough to allow a full account but focused enough to address the relevant issues. Notes should be accurate and stored securely.

Where an employee is accused of something serious, they should usually have an opportunity to respond to the key points before conclusions are reached.

Write a clear report

The investigation report should summarise the issues, evidence gathered, relevant findings and whether there is a case to answer. It should avoid unnecessary opinion and should not recommend a disciplinary sanction unless specifically required by the employer’s process.

The People Powered supports employers with independent investigations, investigation planning and employee relations case management.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Dealing with this in your business?

Our Workplace Investigations gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

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Restructuring and Redundancy: Reducing Risk While Treating People Well

Restructuring is a business decision with people consequences

Businesses restructure for many reasons: cost pressure, changing demand, duplication, new technology, growth, or a different operating model. The commercial reason may be clear, but the people process still needs careful handling.

A rushed redundancy or restructure can damage trust, create legal risk and distract the organisation at the exact moment it needs stability.

Start with the rationale

Before speaking to employees, the employer should be able to explain why change is being considered. What problem is the business trying to solve? Why is the current structure no longer right? What alternatives have been considered?

A clear rationale helps leaders communicate honestly and helps managers stay consistent during consultation.

Map the affected roles

The next step is to identify which roles may be affected and why. This includes considering selection pools, proposed new structures, role changes and whether there are suitable alternatives. Employers should avoid designing the outcome around a preferred individual.

Documentation matters. If decisions are challenged later, the business needs to show how it reached them.

Consultation must be genuine

Consultation is not simply announcing a decision. Employees should have the opportunity to understand the proposal, ask questions, challenge assumptions and suggest alternatives. The employer should consider those responses before reaching a final decision.

Even where the commercial pressure is significant, meaningful consultation remains important.

Selection needs objective criteria

Where employees are selected from a pool, criteria should be as objective and relevant as possible. Skills, qualifications, performance records, disciplinary record and experience may be relevant depending on the role. Subjective impressions should be handled carefully.

Managers involved in scoring should understand the criteria and apply them consistently.

Communication shapes the aftermath

How a restructure is communicated matters. Employees who leave should be treated with dignity. Employees who remain need clarity about the future structure, expectations and workload. Poor communication can leave a residue of uncertainty long after the process ends.

The People Powered supports employers with restructure planning, redundancy consultation, selection documentation and communication support.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Dealing with this in your business?

Our Employee Relations Support gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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Performance Management: From Difficult Conversations to Clear Outcomes

Performance problems rarely improve through silence

Many managers wait too long before addressing performance concerns. They hope the issue will resolve itself, avoid an awkward conversation, or compensate by picking up the work themselves. By the time the conversation happens, frustration has built and the employee may be surprised by the level of concern.

Good performance management starts earlier. It is clearer, calmer and more useful for everyone involved.

Define what good looks like

Employees cannot meet expectations that have not been explained. Performance conversations should begin with clarity: what is the role expected to deliver, what standards apply, what behaviours matter, and how will success be measured?

This is especially important in growing businesses, where roles evolve quickly. What worked informally at the start may need more structure as the organisation becomes larger or more complex.

Give feedback in real time

Annual reviews are not enough. Feedback should be timely, specific and linked to observable examples. Instead of saying someone needs to be more proactive, explain the situations where follow-up was missed, what impact that had, and what should happen differently next time.

Specific feedback is harder to dismiss and easier to act on.

Separate capability from conduct

Not all performance issues are the same. Some are capability issues: the employee may lack skill, confidence, training or understanding. Others are conduct issues: the employee may be choosing not to follow reasonable expectations.

The distinction matters because the management route may differ. Capability often requires support, training and review. Conduct may require disciplinary action if expectations are clear and the employee fails to follow them.

Create an improvement plan

Where performance needs formal support, an improvement plan should set out the concern, required standards, support offered, review dates and possible consequences if improvement is not achieved. The plan should be realistic and measurable.

Support might include training, coaching, closer supervision, clearer priorities or adjustments where health or disability factors are relevant.

Do not let process replace judgement

Performance management should be fair, but it should not become box-ticking. Managers still need to make sound judgements about progress, role requirements, business impact and whether continued employment is sustainable.

Good documentation helps, but the quality of the conversations matters just as much.

The People Powered supports employers with performance frameworks, manager coaching and formal capability processes.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

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Dealing with this in your business?

Our Employee Relations Support gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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What SMEs Need in an Employee Handbook

A handbook should help people make decisions

An employee handbook is often treated as a compliance exercise. It is downloaded, edited quickly and then forgotten. But a good handbook is more than a file. It gives managers and employees a clear set of expectations and helps the business respond consistently.

For SMEs, the best handbook is practical, proportionate and easy to use. It should reflect how the organisation actually works.

Start with the essentials

Most employers need policies covering disciplinary, grievance, absence, holidays, equal opportunities, family leave, flexible working, data protection, health and safety, IT and communications, expenses, and standards of conduct. Depending on the sector, safeguarding, confidentiality, whistleblowing or social media may also be important.

The point is not to include every possible policy. The point is to cover the areas where employees need clarity and where the business carries risk.

Use plain English

A handbook full of legal language may look impressive, but it often fails in practice. Managers need to understand what to do. Employees need to understand what is expected of them. Clear language reduces confusion and makes policies easier to apply.

Where a policy involves a formal process, include simple steps. Who should be contacted? What evidence is needed? What timescales are expected? What happens next?

Make sure it matches the contract

The handbook should work alongside the employment contract. If the contract and handbook contradict each other, confusion follows. Employers should be clear which policies are contractual and which are non-contractual guidance.

This matters because contractual policies can limit flexibility and may create unnecessary risk if the business needs to update a process.

Train managers on the handbook

A handbook only helps if managers know how to use it. Many employee relations problems arise because managers act from habit rather than policy. They approve leave inconsistently, avoid probation reviews, ignore conduct issues or promise flexibility without checking the wider impact.

Manager briefing sessions can make the handbook operational. They also highlight gaps in the document before problems occur.

Review it regularly

Employment law, working practices and organisational risks change. A handbook should be reviewed regularly and updated when the business changes. Hybrid work, AI tools, social media, data handling and workplace behaviour expectations are all areas where older handbooks often fall behind.

The People Powered helps SMEs build practical contracts, handbooks and HR policies that support clear decisions without unnecessary bureaucracy.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

Related service

Dealing with this in your business?

Our HR Compliance, Policies & Contracts gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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Managing Sickness Absence Without Damaging Trust

Absence management is a balance

Sickness absence can be sensitive. Employers need to support employees who are unwell, but they also need to manage service delivery, workload pressure and the impact on colleagues. The challenge is to be compassionate without becoming inconsistent, and firm without becoming unfair.

Good absence management is not about assuming the worst. It is about having a clear, consistent framework that helps managers respond appropriately.

Set expectations early

Employees should know how to report absence, when to make contact, what certification is required and how return-to-work conversations operate. When expectations are unclear, absence becomes harder to manage and managers often respond differently across the business.

A simple absence policy, used consistently, gives everyone a shared reference point.

Use return-to-work conversations well

A return-to-work meeting should not feel like an interrogation. It should confirm the reason for absence, check whether the employee is fit to return, identify any support needed and spot patterns early.

These conversations are valuable because they create a record and show that absence is noticed and managed. They also give employees a chance to raise underlying issues before matters escalate.

Look for patterns, not just totals

Absence data can reveal patterns that individual episodes do not. Frequent Mondays or Fridays, repeated short-term absences, absence after particular shifts, or absence linked to workplace conflict may all require different responses.

Patterns should be explored carefully. There may be a health condition, caring responsibility, workplace issue or disability-related factor. The point is not to accuse; it is to understand enough to manage properly.

Consider support and adjustments

Where absence may relate to a disability or longer-term health issue, employers should consider medical advice and reasonable adjustments where appropriate. Adjustments may include phased returns, changes to duties, altered hours, equipment, additional supervision or temporary flexibility.

Support should be documented. So should the business reasons if a suggested adjustment is not workable.

Know when formal action is appropriate

There are times when formal absence management is necessary. This might happen where absence levels are unsustainable, where triggers are repeatedly reached, or where the employee cannot return within a reasonable timeframe.

Formal action should still be fair, evidence-led and carefully documented. Managers should avoid making assumptions about health conditions or rushing decisions without proper information.

Consistency builds trust

Employees are more likely to trust the process when absence is managed consistently. Ignoring absence for one employee and taking action against another creates resentment and risk.

The People Powered supports employers with absence policies, manager guidance, return-to-work processes and complex sickness absence cases.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

Related service

Dealing with this in your business?

Our Employee Relations Support gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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Handling Disciplinary Issues Fairly and Confidently

Disciplinary issues need structure, not emotion

Disciplinary concerns are rarely comfortable. Managers may feel frustrated, disappointed or anxious about saying the wrong thing. Employees may feel defensive or worried about their job. That is exactly why a clear process matters.

A fair disciplinary process protects both the business and the employee. It helps the employer understand what happened, gives the employee a proper opportunity to respond, and supports a decision that is evidence-led rather than emotional.

Do not jump straight to a decision

One of the most common mistakes is deciding the outcome before the facts have been established. Even where the concern appears obvious, the employer should pause and ask what evidence exists, whether further investigation is needed, and whether there may be context that changes the picture.

Examples include conduct concerns, repeated lateness, failure to follow instructions, inappropriate behaviour or alleged misconduct. Each situation needs enough enquiry to understand the facts before a disciplinary hearing is arranged.

Investigate proportionately

An investigation does not always need to be lengthy, but it does need to be reasonable. That may involve reviewing documents, speaking to witnesses, checking records or asking the employee for an initial account. The level of investigation should match the seriousness and complexity of the allegation.

Poor investigations create risk. They can miss important context, rely on assumptions or leave the decision-maker exposed later if the employee challenges the outcome.

Give the employee clear information

If the matter moves to a disciplinary hearing, the employee should understand the allegations, the evidence being relied on, the possible outcomes and their right to be accompanied where applicable. Vague invitations create confusion and can make the process feel predetermined.

The hearing should be a genuine opportunity for the employee to respond. That means listening properly, asking relevant questions and taking time to consider the decision afterwards.

Choose a proportionate outcome

Not every disciplinary issue requires a warning, and not every serious issue requires dismissal. The employer should consider the evidence, seriousness, previous record, consistency with past decisions, mitigation, length of service and whether trust can reasonably continue.

Outcomes may include no action, informal guidance, a first written warning, a final written warning or dismissal in serious cases. The decision should be confirmed in writing with reasons and appeal rights.

Manager confidence matters

Many disciplinary problems escalate because managers avoid them for too long. Early, fair and well-documented conversations often prevent formal action later. Training managers to address issues calmly and consistently is one of the best ways to reduce employee relations risk.

The People Powered helps employers manage disciplinary processes, investigations and difficult employee conversations with confidence and fairness.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

Related service

Dealing with this in your business?

Our Employee Relations Support gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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Building a People Strategy That Supports Business Growth

People strategy is not an HR document

A useful people strategy is not a folder of policies or a list of HR projects. It is the people side of the business plan. It explains what kind of workforce the organisation needs, what capability must be built, what behaviours matter, and where people risk could slow growth down.

For growing employers, this matters because people decisions often happen reactively. A vacancy appears, someone is promoted quickly, a performance concern is ignored, or a new policy is copied from somewhere else. Each decision may feel small, but together they shape the organisation.

Start with the business direction

The first question is simple: where is the organisation trying to go? A business planning to scale, stabilise, restructure or professionalise will need different people priorities. Growth may require recruitment, management capability and stronger onboarding. Stabilisation may require clearer roles, performance standards and retention work. Restructuring may require risk management, consultation planning and careful communication.

HR becomes valuable when it translates those commercial priorities into practical workforce decisions.

Look at capability, not just headcount

Many businesses ask whether they have enough people. The sharper question is whether they have the right capability in the right places. That includes technical skill, management confidence, decision-making quality and the ability to work through change.

A people strategy should identify the capabilities the business cannot afford to be weak in. It should also name where the current gaps sit. That might be line managers avoiding difficult conversations, inconsistent recruitment, fragile succession planning, or key knowledge sitting with one person.

Connect culture to behaviour

Culture is often discussed in abstract terms, but it becomes real through behaviour. If the business values accountability, managers must set expectations and follow up. If it values fairness, policies must be applied consistently. If it values pace, decision rights need to be clear.

A good people strategy turns values into visible standards. It helps employees understand what good looks like and helps managers know what they are expected to reinforce.

Make the plan operational

The most effective people strategies are practical. They include a small number of priorities, clear owners and realistic timescales. Typical priorities might include improving recruitment quality, strengthening probation reviews, reducing absence hotspots, developing managers, updating contracts and policies, or creating a performance rhythm.

The plan should be reviewed regularly. People issues change quickly, and the strategy should stay close to the business rather than becoming a once-a-year exercise.

Where external HR support helps

External HR support can help leaders step back from the noise and see the pattern. It can bring structure, challenge and employment relations experience without adding unnecessary bureaucracy.

The goal is not HR for the sake of HR. The goal is a business that can grow with fewer surprises, stronger managers and better decisions.

The People Powered supports employers with practical HR strategy, employee relations and organisational development. If your people issues are becoming a barrier to growth, contact us to discuss the right next step.

This article is general information only and should not be treated as legal advice for a specific situation.


Written by Andromeda Falconeri
The People Powered

Related service

Dealing with this in your business?

Our Retained HR Advisory gives employers practical, senior HR support to handle situations like this fairly and confidently. If you have a live issue, get specific advice before you act.

← Back to the resource library · Call +44 07865458399 · team@thepeoplepowered.com

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