Homeworking long-term
Watch our webinar discussing how people professionals can effectively support ongoing homeworking
Watch our webinar discussing how people professionals can effectively support ongoing homeworking
This webinar explores how organisations and people professionals can implement effective and inclusive flexible working policies post-COVID-19 and the legal implications to consider.
Our panel of experts include:
Chaired by Katie Jacobs, Senior Stakeholder Lead, CIPD
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good afternoon everybody i'm going to kick us off i see more people coming in but we'll start bang on time
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i hope everybody is doing well this afternoon my name is katie jacobs from the cipd
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and welcome to this the next webinar in our cipd coronavirus webinar series
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in today's session we're going to be exploring what homeworking looks like when it is for
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the long term we know that many organizations were forced to go remote pretty much
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overnight back in march but now that government guidance has switched back to work from home of ucan
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many organizations are thinking about what home working looks like when it is less about crisis response
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and more about how we work for good now we know that many people professionals have a lot of questions
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about what that means for things like contracts allowances and reward as well as things like culture performance and development
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and luckily we have a really excellent panel on hand to offer some presentations and to
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discuss this timely and important topic so i'm joined by johnny gifford johnny
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is senior advisor for organizational behaviour at the cipd and he's been leading on cipd research
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projects around remote working and virtual teams we have alan price ceo of bright hr
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which offers hr software and support to smes and alan is our employee relations
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and legal expert on this session and last but not least lee le favor aya vice president of human
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resources at enterprise and she has experience in running remote teams as many
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of enterprises colleagues have been entirely home-based for a number of years now so thank you
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all very much for joining us today as ever i'm just going to do the housekeeping very quickly
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the session is being recorded it will be available to access afterwards as well with slides so you will be able to
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download those we'll make them available either later on today or tomorrow to submit questions and please do can i
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ask you to use the q a tab which you should be able to see at the bottom of your screen please use the q a tab if there's
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anything you want me to ask the panel but do use the chat function to connect with each other and to share and learn
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i can see people talking about the webinar on there which is brilliant if you want to share anything about what your organization is doing or
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any challenges then please do that as well just remember to set it to go to all panelists and all attendees
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if you want to get response from everybody watching remember that the cipd coronavirus hub
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is here for you as a resource and we're adding things to it all the time and this topic is going to be a really big one for us over the coming months
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and last but not least i want to flag our well-being helpline for our members in the uk and ireland
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with award-winning workplace wellbeing provider health assured we are now providing cipd members with
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free help and support via sessions with qualified therapists online or over the phone so that's the
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housekeeping done on to our topic for this afternoon now it's been more than six months
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since the introduction of lockdown measures forced uk businesses to shut their doors and implement widespread homework
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many organizations responded rapidly in crisis mode using quite short-term fixes
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while this initial enforced home working experiment has proven largely successful so we all
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know productivity hasn't fallen off a cliff after all what are the implications for longer term homeworking what is the impact on
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employee mental physical and financial well-being what does it mean for the pay and benefits deal and what support
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should employers be offering their workforce in the short term over the coming colder and darker winter
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months ahead in short is there a blueprint for effective long-term home working i'm sure if
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you've tuned into a lot of these webinars you've got pretty used to seeing my sofa and posted danish chairs after last six
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months i think we've got six more months of that ahead of us so lucky you so that's what we're talking about this
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afternoon um we're going to hear from johnny first johnny's going to set some of the context he's going to talk about some cipd research
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and then alan's going to run us through some of the legal things that we need to know then lee's going to share some of her
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experience and then we're going to move into q a please do get your questions in from the start and we will take as many as we can
4:23
we had some submit in advance so i'll cover those as well don't leave them all until the last 10 minutes uh if you put them in early you're more
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likely to get them answered so that's it for me for now i'm going to hand over to johnny to kick us off
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over to you johnny thanks very much katie i think it's tempting to see change
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wherever you look in a pandemic the sense that after covid nothing's ever going to be
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the same again but of course in many respects i think that we will return to default
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uh pretty much as soon as we can or will be taken over by other challenges like
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coming out of a recession or adapting to brexit don't forget brexit so a question for
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uh how we work is where do we genuinely think there's going to be long-term change
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from the our experiences of the covered pandemic and for my money i think even though
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it's not for everybody an increase in homeworking is the most likely
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long-term change in how we work i think we were primed to do it through
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developments in remote technology so supporting technology had already
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advanced and people were more used to using it so the whole experience was relatively
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frictionless um and along with that it become more socially acceptable
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so the view that working from home is kind of one step away from shirking i think that was less common
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and kovid in a way just just gave us that push to show that it could be
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done more widely how much it will change in practice we don't quite know but we do have
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some ideas so if we look at some of our survey research on the next slide we can see that
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employers this is recent research done over the summer employers see that the proportion of home workers
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could roughly double overall and so you can see that here for both
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uh working from home all the time which is the the pink bars and also people working
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regularly that's a day a week or more on the next slide we can also see that
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employees expectations are changing too so employees have seen that through covid
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just how practical it can be to work from home if you look at the green bar at the top you can see that one in three
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uk workers are likely to request working from home more in the future
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however if you look at the orange bar there it's also noticeable that one in 10 uk workers have been put off
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by the experience of working from home in the lockdown and they're now less likely
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to work from home the other thing that i draw from this graph is that it highlights that flexible
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working is not just about working from home so if we look at the other green bars you can see that there may we may see
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demands increase in other types of flexible working arrangements so in particular flexi time
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and compressed working hours moving on to the next slide um it's
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really important to recognize that if we look at this in the wider context of work life balance and work hours
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this is an area in which the uk is particularly poor at so what you've got here is a list of a
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selection of oecd countries surveyed in 2015 and on that question about work
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family interference uk is near the bottom of the list we know that many of us
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would like to reduce our hours uh typical commute time is sort of getting on for four hours a week six and
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a half hours a week in london we know that this is an area that we're not very good at
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now flexible working is clearly not a panacea it can simply mean that you're juggling
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your time more but it is a key way that we can manage our time to fit our needs and we know from our
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work in the the good work index that we can um there is a big unmet demand in
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flexible working so on the next slide um we have um
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so uh sorry i'm missing my no i'm missing a slide there we know from our work on the good work
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index that about half of us a bit over half of us work flexibly in some way or other
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but two-thirds of us would like to work flexibly in a way that's not currently available so there's clearly more we can
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do in this what this slide shows is that covert 19 has brought about change in a very
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unequal way so far so we can see as you know you'd well
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expect that manual and less skilled jobs are much less likely to be able to be
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working from home through the pandemic and more likely to have been furloughed
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and you can see a similar trend across industries so it's retail and in particular hospitality where you
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see more furloughing less working from home now for many
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people in these situations the number one priority is going to be basic job security that's just a reality
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of you know living in recession but i think it's also worth noting that
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employers in the past have had quite a narrow view of who can work from home who can't work from home
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in the past and what the lockdown has showed is that many people who'd never been given this option
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before can work from home so i think we should challenge ourselves
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employers who challenge themselves to offer flexible working where possible what's the next step
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um on the next slide we need to think about how we can get the best out of
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virtual teams and the following slide what we did in may of this year was we
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conducted evidence review and evidence review summarizing the body
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of research and one of the main findings that we have is that the basic ingredients for
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successfully managing virtual teams are pretty much the same
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as as face-to-face or collocated teams but it's harder to get those factors in
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place so for example especially when we look at knowledge intensive businesses
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which let's face it as many of us it's clear expectations and role clarity
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within teams are even more important in virtual teams than they are
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in face-to-face teams but they're harder to to get so it can mean that it's helpful
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to give a bit more direction over who's going to do what at what point
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but on the other hand social cohesion and trust are more important in virtual
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teams and they're harder to build and it's easy to undermine
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so undermining trust can happen in virtual teams through procedures to monitor
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performance for example this has been seen quite conclusively in research
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equally we see that virtual teams become more reliant on on knowledge sharing but knowledge
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sharing is harder to do when we think about communications communications are often delayed
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people give less information when they're communicating by email and it's harder to interpret messages
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than it is when you're working with people face to face so throughout these areas there's a
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simple message that it takes more effort to manage virtual teams but that extra effort is definitely
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worth it um we should though take a note of encouragement which is that one of the
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great facilitators of managing virtual teams is having rich
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media and communications so what we have now with zoom or ms teams
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or whichever platform you prefer is that we're much better equipped now
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to make uh the shift to virtual teams than we were before even if people need a bit of training in
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how to make the best use of teleconferencing or video conferencing and you know things like home broadband
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can sometimes leave much to be desired because the the upload speeds are not
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symmetrical with download speeds and so on you know we're basically in um a good place
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um there are more considerations and perhaps you can pick up on some of these um in our discussion um things like the
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the knock-on effect of the nature on the nature of the employment relationship pay contracts potentially there's
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an opportunity for us as a society to become less london-centric um
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but i think i'll sum up now uh with the next slide to talk about uh the cipd's
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message so first of all cipd's got three crucial tests for the return to the
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workplace in the current climate we ask is it essential to return to work is it
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safe and is it mutually agreed with workers and we also firmly believe that
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employees should have day one rights to request flexible working as flexible working is something that
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should be the norm rather than the exception and i think with that i will hand back to you
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katie thanks very much for that um johnny and thanks everyone for putting starting to put questions in and
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comments i've seen somebody saying that they decided in january to give up their office and to work from home they did not expect to get a huge push
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in march to speed this up but the office is already gone they've already made that decision i i wonder if we'll see more of that
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i'm going to hand over to alan now alan's going to look at the legal considerations that we've got to think about when we talk about making
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homework it work for the long term over to you alan thanks katie i've got
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10 minutes to give you a whistle-stop tour of the legal context so there's a lot of slides to cover and
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as katie outlined they're going to be available on the website so i'll try and go through this as quickly as i can
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and trying to answer some questions along the way so next slide please so obviously we're
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going to talk about the legal right away from home and you can see from the slide there's a lot of
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considerations which johnny covers really really well so uh next slide please so the legal
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right to work from home i think the best advice the best employee relations aspect that i can
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talk about is the point johnny made a lot of flexible work whilst employees don't have the automatic right
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to work from home some do in terms of what's in the employment contract i would deal with any request to work
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from home in the same way as the cipd are pushing for day one rights so whilst flexible working eligibility
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comes in at 26 weeks the best advice is to deal with any request away from home and
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i saw one of the participants ask that question about the request away from home as a flexible waking request
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because in that context you're looking at both the business and the employees reasons for that request next slide
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please and if you're looking for guides in that area cipd's got some really helpful
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guidance but i'd also call upon you to look at the acas code of practice which deals with the request await
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flexbeat because that's what the future's going to hold for us in terms of working from home now obviously there's a time limit on
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that and there's that 26-week rule we talked about earlier but again there's nothing preventing you as an
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employer from dealing with that from day one there's nothing preventing you from dealing with a request away from home
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as a right of a quest to work flexibly and the certain things the employees should be thinking about in terms of
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changing their working conditions and at the moment most employees are working from home
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maybe not by mutual consent but just because of the guys that's come from government but johnny talks about that mutual
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consent and that trust relationship so it's always good to get any type of agreement in writing
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so we go to the next slide it talks about the procedure so it's
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obviously the employer wants to agree that request to work from home in the long term but it should be mutually agreed ideally
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should be a meeting ideally digitally so we talk about what platforms are available we've got the zoom
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we've got life size we've got microsoft teams we've got skype there's other forms of
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communication you've even got whatsapp calling you've got facetime calling but try and have that virtual
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face-to-face meeting to talk about the request and obviously if you can record that
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meeting confirm the discussion and write him and allow the employee that right to appeal as
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well there's no statute right in these types of meetings to be accompanied
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but the cast code of practice talks about allowing the employees some type of accompaniment it makes it more informal for them and
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then the home place set and you may have a family member available again just
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talk to the employee about that the next slide please
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employees do have the right to refuse flexible working and and there are reasons available for
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refusal and at the end of these slides there's some guidance from employment tribunal
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decisions some employment appeal tribunal decisions that i won't go into now but as johnny said there's very little
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evidence in the skilled and professional roles showing that people can't work from home
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and the slide talks in detail about the reasons you can refuse those requests away from home you are
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going to hear from lee talking about in context how it works for their organization and they'll be
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different for everyone next slide please
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we are starting to see some tribunal claims not just dealing with refusals to be able to work from home
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but that employment relationship breaking down in terms of the situation we find ourselves in and always
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we find ourselves in a simple situation of what was discussed at the time so therefore having these formal meetings are
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important referring back to contemporaneous documentation minutes of a meeting a home working
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arrangement in writing makes it really clear on the expectation from all the parties
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and it makes everyone clear of what's expected of them and why and any concerns that both the employees got
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should be discussed in the application and the decision and more so in that homework and arrangement next
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slide please let's just talk just touch on the homework and agreement
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at the moment most employment contracts in the uk relate to a statement of main terms or
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an employee handbook unemployment contract and it normally states a normal place of work
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and it's normally an office based location but it may refer to a variation across the uk
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a homemaking agreement takes that a step further it either provides a short-term medium or long-term arrangement
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as to what expectation we've got and we should be asking our employees and our colleagues to review and sign that
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so it's very clear a lot of small employees that i speak to and a bit in limbo at the moment you don't necessarily know where this is
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going to end up the employee thinks it's going to be permanent because it's working really well for them the employee thinks it's government guidance so that the place of
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work isn't covered secure so there are little steps we can take to make sure that
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there's an end date or a review date to show about the expectations about a safe place of work at home
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there's obviously loan working to consider there's working time to consider and we're going to cover that a little bit later in these slides
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the next slide please where can i was subject to what happens with brexit or
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transition you the uk cabinet office told me the other day i should be calling it i'm not allowed to call it brexit you'll be telling me so transition
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period so during transition we need to be thinking about opt-out agreement so at the moment employees have the right to agree
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through mutual content and opt that of 48 hours but we need to be thinking about that so
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again if they're working from home there's been a bit of expectation that people feel obliged to work longer hours
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that shouldn't be the case but if they are working out should be agreed and and if you are beyond 48 hours they
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should be looking to sign off that agreement again bearing in mind that may be a changing with the working time
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regulations next slide please i think i've said this in all the slides
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so far keeping records not just for the employees benefit but for the employees benefit
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really concerned at the moment that a lot of employees awaken extra hours they feel obligated the distinction between home and work is
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very much blamed at the moment and i just give you one example a technology that we use is something called blip
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where employees check in and check out it's very much about work-life balance it forces them to check in and check out
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and it does give the employee a record which is important both for the uk and ireland in terms of
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being able to share working time obligations and even in the uk since march we've seen 1.6 million uses of
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that application but it shouldn't be used as a way of monitoring employees is about that checking in and checking
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out and also this challenge of and home-based workers in the professional and skilled roles
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feeling they have to demonstrate what they're doing that's not the case so again it is important to keep
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records of what the homework and arrangement is what the balance is and also what hours
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they're doing next slide please and change in pay i think that was one
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of the questions that was asked at the outset in terms of some employees may have a
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london allowance some employees and may have some support on
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commuting costs and i think again as part of this homework and arrangement it's through mutual consent
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that's a discussion to be had but at the moment you you have no uh legal right to change those terms
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conditions unless the three mutual consent there's been a little bit of talk um
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especially in the sme community that we talked to 30 000 of them that there's opportunity to review
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pay and reward you should be done through consent and that sort of wants from an employee to
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look at costs during code is obviously apparent but those employees entered into that employment
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relationship with a very clear understanding of their total reward package so you need to be careful when looking at that
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and again there may be an imbalance when we do have some employees wishing to return to working
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through technology uh limitations all that issue we talked about earlier about isolation i mean i'm aware today
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partly because of my internet connection and a new home and partly and there's a check-in of those it
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professionals who are in work today so you need to think about that when you look at the total reward balance
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and next slide please i don't like the way monitoring stuff
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from home but it seems to come up so hit it on the head and a lot of small employees use that type of terminology
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you do have the opportunity um to monitor usage and through technology but it should be
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through um consent it should be um very much balanced
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there's a german case uh i think came out yesterday with h m that was very much onerous
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both on monitoring and gdpr obligations they went too far that's quite quite a
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big fine but i think johnny covered it earlier there's also an issue in terms of the employment relationship of our trust
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and it shouldn't be that we don't trust that at home it may just be a case of how we
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perform or report on that performance and it shouldn't be about how many calls or videos they do we
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should already have a performance framework in place and if we don't again embellish that in terms of the homework
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and arrangement next slide please miss conduct from what's never been an issue before
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because everyone's been based on where i can only give you anecdotal small issues uh uh calls going in maybe into
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a later evening where employees have children at home they've done split shifts
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and that needs to have breaks uh half day annually dependence leave on paid leave
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and that may have impacted and i think think of one example where um they've worked and even shifted maybe
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they've had a glass of wine with dinner and there's been a bit of a challenge there and so just reminding employees that the
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home-based environment they need to be a very degree of flexibility but when this becomes a long-term arrangement it's just a normal place
25:23
away and next slide please
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bringing staff took back to wake if that would ever to happen and how to deal with that but again if
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the homemaking relationship is agreed if that flexibility is there it should be discussed
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in the homework and arrangement if there's a need to work from home it should be there and now if there's a place or needs away
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from the office now it should be now it shouldn't be based on government gardens there should be a
25:52
need or one to be discussed now we're not going to talk about those rare occasions where there may be an even
25:59
disciplinary action uh if an employer refuses to return to the office but remember returning to
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the office is the office it's not it's not returning to work they're already at work now next slide please
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so in summary there's some challenges with remote management and there's fair
26:19
procedures when dealing with employees from home and there's an issue about loan working
26:25
check and check out display screen equipment health and safety data protection confidentiality what are
26:31
you discussing what you're monitoring needs to be in the home worker agreement and engagement employee well-being
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we're lucky that as cipd members we have the benefit of the health assured helpline the digital app but what resources are
26:45
you giving to your employees for isolation and mental health is really really important
26:50
and the benefits of that lack of travel is important my commute is uh 10 to 15 hours a week
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you can tell from my accent and that background is in manchester so that is manchester but i
27:01
i live closer to liverpool and work-life balance has massively improved you are getting increased weight canals
27:07
but again you need to check out with that it's probably going too far there's a money saving to the employee that shouldn't need to be repaid to the
27:13
employer and an engagement and productivity for some at home but
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like i think katie for once i might be on time so that was a whistle stop taught us
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back to katie that was a a huge whistle stop tour thank you and you covered so many bases
27:29
there um um lots of questions coming in we're going to address those um shortly also when my colleagues have
27:36
shared the um check-in checkout app that allan mentioned i saw some people are asking about that in the chat um and these slides will be available to
27:42
download so you can digest them at your leisure later including those that we didn't get through um so before we go into q a i'd like to
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invite lee to share some of her experiences at enterprise over to lee
27:54
great thank you katie well for us you know it's like a lot of you um out there you know we had to move a
28:01
lot of employees home really quickly and katie mentioned that we did have a um a heritage or
28:07
a several departments that were home workers and so we've had a strong program of homework in our call
28:13
centers for some time but really for us at enterprise a lot of our employees are customer facing so we
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run around 450 branches it's a retail operation and so we have this really mix of
28:25
administrative employees that have the potential to work from home and then how do we service our customers and how do we how do we bridge all those
28:32
gaps together so at the beginning of march we probably we had a few hundred dedicated home
28:37
workers and probably a couple of hundred more people that were flexible and sometimes they worked
28:44
from the office sometimes they worked from home um and then we had countless
28:51
number of people on what we call an alternative work arrangement they're just minor adjustments to their
28:57
schedule but we really don't document it they work it out with their manager and we we go from there but you know
29:04
clearly in mid-march we had to move um another several hundred employees
29:10
home from our administrative teams really quickly and it's you know we have the same
29:16
challenges that a lot of people you know how do we make sure this team is you know the technology secure
29:22
a lot of people didn't have um they had dedicated pcs at work not laptop technology
29:28
how do we make sure they have proper technology to do their job so really we were going through all of
29:33
all of the same challenges that many people have you know the personal equipment challenge the wi-fi connectivity
29:40
challenge how do we deal with those pieces so immediately we created an interim home
29:46
working team um that was a little bit different or i would say a work from home team not a
29:51
homeworking team we already had that there was that their job was to really address some of these challenges and really to
29:57
bring it together um and they introduced um this concept called the three c's um cooperation
30:03
coordination and communication you can tell health and safety was involved there
30:08
with the three c's but this really helped us create an environment that we were being really collaborative
30:14
about what we were hearing we were surveying our employees to understand their needs and where their challenges
30:19
were we were working really closely with our it department i mean everybody knows everybody wanted
30:25
equipment at the same time and that can be a challenge and then how did we run some of these dse assessments and make sure that
30:32
um we had proper um you know line of sight so to speak there
30:37
so this interim policy was created um but we had our own challenges i mean
30:43
one of the first challenges is you know we had so many different levels of employees the slide that johnny showed you know really demonstrated how that
30:50
works and and everybody had a different maybe challenge there children needing homeschooling well the hours allowed
30:56
parents to do that but was it enough for them um and while this isn't really didn't really come up as part of
31:02
our homework policy one of the best i think initiatives that we implemented were 10
31:09
paid emergency leave days early in the crisis and we allowed
31:14
people that were ill they could use it for coveted illness coveted caretaking or school situations so we could give
31:22
our employees a little assurance there and that helped in that respect but we also had a lot of our young
31:28
employees who are at the bottom of the pecking order in their home um they didn't have an ideal place to
31:35
work so some of our apprentices maybe their their mom their dad their older brother or sister
31:41
you know god first dibs on the wi-fi or the technology and so they found that
31:46
sometimes really difficult in fact some of these um this group of people are like when can we come back to the office
31:53
um and then just the the technology uh we were just i mean we didn't even
31:59
have teams at that time with very few people in our company so we had to really upskill a lot of people really quick
32:05
i was joking in the beginning people didn't turn on their camera for meetings and we were like okay this is virtual now
32:11
let's let's get into the the system so we had some really basic issues we had to address i mean
32:17
um people didn't know they had to leave their computer on at work to remote into their technology so you can just kind of see a
32:24
lot of the same i'm sure challenges in your organization from a mental health
32:31
perspective we needed to make sure that we were reaching out and making sure that people understood
32:36
where they could go and be signposted um for help or for
32:41
advice so that that whole making sure that and re reminding people of their
32:48
benefits was a really important part of that and our our culture really shifted um
32:54
but it goes back to some of the things we've mentioned before the trust we've now moved from a work from home
33:00
policy to we're creating a work from anywhere across border policy now that comes with its
33:05
own challenges tax implications and but but that can just show you how quickly
33:12
people can move that thought process um where people were sometimes reluctant for certain roles or certain departments
33:19
um to work from home and so we really i think moving in the right
33:24
direction and i think that probably we can tell by our employees around
33:29
60 to 65 percent really that are in roles that can work from home do want this hybrid model for the future
33:37
so we've got to really think about how that works as we start bringing people back um because alternatively we had about 20
33:43
percent of people that that really want to be back into the office every day so we really have to build on that
33:49
and um you know it's really for us it's how do we continue to make it a fun
33:55
inclusive environment you know we just had our employee opinion survey and we can tell that we're doing some things
34:01
um well um but we've got to really explore that virtual engagement and we need more we
34:07
need to do more there um and so some of the things that we have done that have been really impactful are some listening sessions
34:14
um and talking about different topical issues that might be going on in the workplace or or in society in general and those have
34:22
proven to be popular but it's definitely an evolution um and it's you know we're on a journey
34:28
so that's just a little whistle-stop tour about what we've been experiencing over the since march thank you very much
34:35
for that lee i'm coming by allen and johnny uh to take yourselves off me and julie everybody everybody off me or i'll be
34:41
saying you're on mute multiple times in the q a um i'm gonna go to to questions and we've had a lot that
34:47
are quite um similar so i'll group them together so quite a few around what is
34:53
the role of employers or what are employers um kind of compelled to do around
34:58
setting people up to work from home so whether that is providing allowances for people to be
35:05
able to buy the equipment to set themselves up to work from home um what that means um around things
35:10
like um claiming back from hmrc um all those all those kind of things as
35:16
we move into working longer term so alan just from a legal perspective what is the duty of care from an employer when it
35:23
comes up comes to setting people up to work from home effectively and safely
35:28
we're getting into health and safety you know rather than employment law so uh it's been a while in terms of
35:35
the health and safety of work obviously the employer has to provide a safe place of work and the home is a safe place of work the
35:41
most practical and simple steps is to ask the employee either with guidance from a health and safety
35:47
professional or hr professional we've got support is the complete two types of assessment
35:52
which are a display screen equipment assessment which is the old adage of where's your screen
35:57
is it safe and obviously they have to provide as the employer and tools to make sure that
36:04
they've got the correct screen they're not working from a laptop and the screen's the right height and then there's also an office based
36:10
for the risk assessment which is the chair the desk and
36:15
a lot of employees in the short term are working from sofas a lot of employees have allowed
36:20
employees to their company chair home like the chair i'm sitting on now and some have provided the contribution
36:26
and i think i saw in one of the chats someone said about a
36:32
notional figure of a hundred pounds or 200 pounds i think a lot of employers are now
36:37
offering that there's more employees that way speaking to we're saying you should be looking to provide the budget the hmrc gives some taxable
36:45
relief to that i'm speaking to your finance teams but i think 100 pounds provide
36:51
the ikea type of basic workstation and i think most employees will need a screen as well as a laptop
36:57
a headset in terms of dsc and like such like i think on the next session if you want
37:02
to let me know i can get one of our health and safety professionals on the call as well to help out thankfully he's got a view there thank
37:09
you very much alan and the figure i hear most excited when i talk to hrd's about this is 250 pounds as we allow
37:15
um lee have you set people up and what about long-term home workers were they given an allowance to set themselves up
37:21
um well our long-term homeworkers um we already had a program and basically when we would hire them
37:27
they came with their equipment and um with with their own devices now we're rethinking everything right
37:34
now because i think it's a good time to just review and make sure that everything's
37:39
still fit for purpose so we haven't um really changed that policy yet but we are looking at different things
37:45
i think the point that that al made about being flexible so we have allowed people to come get their work
37:51
equipment um and take it home or in some cases we've gotten you know that to them uh you know
37:57
a chair for example i think you know everybody has the story of and probably a lot of people on the phone if we're
38:03
really thinking are we sitting in a proper office chair right now you know i'm not sure we could all tick
38:08
that box and so we've really tried to be as flexible and address things right now
38:14
in a really personable way and as we start to evolve back into the workplace and see
38:19
where that's going thank you for making decisions yeah um quite a lot of
38:24
questions and discussion about what needs to be a contractual change versus what is part of a agile working kind of policy johnny any
38:33
thoughts on what needs to or should change long term in terms of kind of contracts and what
38:38
can be done on a kind of trust basis i think i mean you think as alan's already said
38:43
uh in terms of providing an an office environment that's suitable there is a there's a duty of care for employers to
38:50
to make sure that that is the case uh i noticed one one of the comments uh questions coming in
38:55
saying you know what about people who can't work from home and are looking to work in an office which is then closed and i think that's
39:02
a that's a difficult but serious conversation that needs needs to take place so i think you know there could be some
39:10
duty of care there for employers to make allowances for people to come into the office if that's
39:16
if that's what they need so in terms of uh in terms of contracts changing
39:22
and at what point do you need to change a contract if someone's working
39:28
sort of you know half time at home or 80 at home allen may be able to
39:34
advise on that more gen you know more better than me but i think that what's
39:40
what's likely to change over the over the medium or longer term is that the way in which employment
39:45
relationships are set up um is slightly different so that we can see
39:50
um we'll see more jobs which which are home based from the off
39:56
or more jobs which allow for that or require that and
40:03
and i think that that is likely to change all sorts of dynamics of how we work and uh contractual
40:09
relationships i think it is good to get those things in in writing if if you can both from the point of view
40:16
of what the employer's duty of care is and from the point of view of what uh you know where employees
40:24
can or are required to work so i think you know adam made the very
40:30
basic point that get stuff in writing have the conversations from a people management point of view
40:37
it's really important to show that you're supportive to show that you're listening to show that you're working um in
40:44
consultation with employees you're not just saying there's the memo that's that's what you've got to do now it's
40:51
got to be a two-way conversation thanks johnny um alan can i ask you to expand on um what the
40:56
what the legal obligations are there just on another point the cipd website's
41:02
got a really good homework and survey questionnaire which is a good starting position i think one of the other questions about
41:07
what's available on the premium service of hr and form i think and the challenge with the
41:13
employment contract is it's always seen as sort of a backstop insofar as that it's seen as what's the legal
41:19
framework for allowing working from home and and what obligations for pay and um
41:25
is it safe or not but the best conversations are those that are either at the offer of employment or
41:30
when home working takes place so that homework working arrangement about what we're going to provide you
41:36
what what expectations you've got but it's going to be by mutual consent because at the moment a lot of employees are working for me
41:43
the goods will or the employees awaken from god's will so there's um we're starting to get a situation of
41:48
custom and practice which means an employment law that what we've done for so long becomes permanent and therefore employees have
41:55
through custom and practice through a period of time become home workers and that's now their
42:00
normal place of work in the same way that if i wasn't traveling to manchester today and i stayed at home in little for
42:06
the next two years that would become my place of work same with pay same with ours so there's definitely a need
42:12
and a call out to get that homework and arrangement in writing that becomes an addendum an amendment to that statement
42:19
of main terms or that contract of employment thank you alan um lee we had a question
42:25
about how employers are combating the loneliness from colleagues some of the social bonds
42:31
of the workplace are broken can you give any insight into what you've done enterprise to keep people feeling connected well one
42:38
of the um things that we did and i think this with something a little different than
42:44
we had done in the past is um particularly after black lives matter we did some listening sessions
42:50
with our employees so it was really just kind of changing up maybe how we would approach a topic
42:55
and inviting people to call in and have a chat with the md or we've done some different things
43:00
around getting uh webinars or information out at different times on different topics
43:06
and we can kind of through the technology we can do this and invite people to do it more on a
43:12
national basis where before it was probably more regionally based and so people can
43:17
actually hear views from the top or things like that but then we've seen some great examples and these are just
43:23
like um things i'm sure we're all doing pub quizzes you know happy hours um lunches
43:30
um you know uh in the beginning the first week out that every friday meeting one team would have a
43:35
best hat day everybody would wear a hat and they would put it out on twitter and our internal social media
43:42
so we've used that a lot more to kind of leverage what people are doing and sharing you know their accomplishments that way
43:49
but it's it's you know it's and then it's really trying to connect people on projects in a different way um in
43:56
bringing people bringing people in so i think that it's it's really similar to what
44:03
you would do to build build engagement other ways but i think it's really our managers are still trying to figure out how do i do that virtually how do i
44:10
build a relationship with a new employee and have you found any technology or tools particularly useful somebody's
44:16
asked about what's available out there do you know i think if i said you know we were still
44:22
implementing teams um in the beginning so i'm not sure i would be the best person to talk about technology
44:28
um but in all joking aside you know i think one of the things that we did we were also going through
44:35
a new hr system integration and we were still kind of in the implementation phases at the beginning
44:41
and just some little things that we did about where we put things on the landing page to have everybody go
44:46
through that system so everybody knows where different platforms are that that sounds really simple but we
44:54
have people going on to different places and just trying to put everything in you know one central place where they
45:00
can see everything that they can use to make their um workday more useful thank you and johnny
45:07
on that technology point is there anything that you've seen working particularly well um
45:12
and enabling the better virtual teams i think peop helping people get to grips
45:19
with the likes of video conferencing is is just a very basic thing i don't think we should assume
45:24
you know you still have uh people on on video conferences kind of like that um you just sort of see their
45:31
forehead or you can't hear them properly or i think you know just a very basic bit of training on how people can get up
45:38
and running someone the other day suggested to me why don't you uh stick your ethernet
45:43
cable in if your wi-fi's uh connections are not very fast and i thought blimey had not thought of that
45:49
before so i you know stuck in and ethernet cable and lo and behold my internet was working
45:55
more more quickly so i think there's there's various just basic training that we can help
46:01
people with so that they can have better quality interactions it's that base that we need to get as close to
46:08
face-to-face interactions as possible so that's about the quality of uh video
46:13
conferencing i think that it's also important to make sure that that
46:18
there's a kind of level level playing field for want of a better phrase that if you've got some people in the
46:24
office having a face-to-face meeting and you've got some people at home who would be dialing in
46:29
just make everyone dialing in um and if you've got some people who who might not have a webcam then
46:37
you know think about making a telephone call instead so i think trying to have uh
46:43
meetings in which everyone can contribute equally i think is really important too i think that's a really interesting
46:50
point about that kind of digital fluency that we've all assumed that everybody has because we've been doing this for six months but
46:56
just kind of getting people up to speed with with the basics is probably something that a lot of organizations
47:01
can still consider because i'm obviously i'm still seeing a lot of people with only their thoughts
47:07
but but we are in in so much of a better place than we were even just a few years ago
47:13
when when i had my leg in plaster sort of four or five years ago it and it struck me at that point just how well i
47:19
could take part in office life through video conferencing and that hadn't been the case before
47:25
you know we it services who can log on to your computer and with a click of a couple of buttons
47:31
it's we're really well equipped and there is a there's a lot to be gained i think in this
47:37
so lee did you have a point yeah i was just gonna say and somebody i think put this in uh the comments um one of our teams is
47:43
trying a new app called dumb teacup i believe and they've had some really good um
47:48
feedback from it so we may look to do that so there are some really innovative things out there but one thing
47:53
we went to a lot of our partners and we said what can you do for us how can you help us
47:59
take this virtual experience and really make it more
48:05
real firm employee's beneficial and so we had a lot of like for example talking talent our parental coaching uh
48:11
that we we company that we use you know they've helped us take everything virtually and
48:16
so our participation rates have gone up there we had another company that that we used
48:23
that are really helping us with some uh basic you know information about elder care
48:30
self-care you know just really get signposting people to different different points and so your eaps may be
48:36
a really good source too to to help with that virtual experience thank you and alan question for you um from angela
48:44
do you feel there will be many grievances and disputes later this year or perhaps from from spring 21 when there may be a push
48:50
by employers for people to return to the office or workplace if so what's your guidance being prepared and reducing the number of
48:56
potential complaints we saw on the last round of government guidance age of people to go back to
49:03
where there's sort of a disconnect from those who had to remain awake and low skill roles not being sort of
49:09
recognized for that and we saw grievances from those being asked to come back from way for no
49:14
other reason than government guidance when you're working very well at home i think i know i keep on stressing the
49:20
point and again we'll obviously ensure that uh hr and former got some model guidance and again just to
49:26
call out you've all got access to the free gip employment law helpline where you can get more guidance
49:32
much longer and probably quicker than i can give it and but i think the homework and arrangement
49:37
is really important to set the context of the relationship now what's expected from them is there an
49:43
end date on it is it because of technology is it because of the role why do we require them back to work at
49:48
any stage in the future and have those conversations now it's the currency is there now it
49:53
shouldn't be something that's led by government the relationship between the employer and the employee and that
49:59
contract is fluid that's not what's written in stone two years ago when that employee started but it's how that evolves so it's very much
50:06
about grievances from what i've seen over the last 20 years in employee relations because that expectation
50:12
or level playing field doesn't exist the obligations between the parties aren't always clear
50:18
and that fluidity of relationship varies day by day and those check-ins and those relationships and those agreements in
50:24
writing need to stay current and that that should avoid grievances if you do okay
50:29
you can go back to that contemporaneous document email or record where it was discussed and agreed thank
50:36
you i see something i think it needs it needs to come back as well just to that very fundamental point that we need
50:41
to do things which are mutually agreed so for the current environment if you if you know if someone can't work at
50:48
home but you close the office can you find another mutually agreed solution like working in a co-working
50:55
space further down the line is it 80 or 50 working at home mutually agree you know
51:01
have go through these these genuine conversations where you can you can say what the business needs
51:07
are and what people's individual needs are and and find a way that works
51:13
and talking about that kind of balance of home versus office and that blended approach you
51:18
were talking about lee are you thinking that you will have kind of two days in three days out or
51:23
anything kind of set in stone or will it be up to people to decide with your managers well we've been
51:29
consulting with our employees a lot about what they want and what they see for the future and
51:34
we were on well on our journey for a return to work plan and we had even released all of our videos about
51:40
how to come back to the office safely and um but i do think people will want that
51:45
hybrid model and that's why we've gone to this work from anywhere you know let's just really harness you
51:52
know the the um support and the movement and really how do we continue to make
52:00
this a better more flexible workplace like i said a lot of our roles are customer facing
52:06
those are not available to work from home because we need to service our customers but whenever we can whatever opportunity
52:12
we have to make the workplace more flexible for our employees in the productivities there
52:18
why wouldn't we take advantage of it and would you be letting people work from anywhere abroad we've had a few people discussing
52:24
that in the chat well we are putting yes we the policies actually called um
52:29
i've got it right here the crossbow the draft the cross-border policy now there are tax implications this is the
52:36
difficult thing i mean there are clear tax implications and can you work in a nut you know do you
52:42
have the ability there's limited number of days so um there's going to be it's going to be really prescriptive
52:48
there but um you know i think it'll the the concept is
52:54
let's just be as flexible as we can we're here we've come i guess one thing that's that i
53:00
think is a big challenge is i could even start to see this with the um return to work you know certain
53:05
people almost their mindset changing back well we need to be back in an office so i think we just need to make sure that
53:11
we you know really capture this moment and drive it forward and just uh before i
53:18
leave you and go on to somebody else somebody's just put into the q a that they really like the idea of this working from anywhere
53:23
but from a contractual point of view what do you class the work location to be these people we haven't gotten there yet
53:29
like i said this is our this is our policy for the future but i think what we would probably do is
53:34
still class them in there um they would still be dom you know domicile and everything in their class them in their normal corporate or
53:41
administrative office and then do some type of in my mind i'm thinking addendum there
53:47
would be some reporting requirements about where people would need to work and probably a more robust process
53:55
approval with that just so we know where people are um you know and they're not just on holiday for example
54:02
thank you um alan can i ask you to add in on that we've had quite a few comments about this working abroad
54:16
i think the point you made about the tax application there's also a very apparent employment law issue about
54:23
places of work and there's a lot of caseload which talks about pilots for example who sort of travel from a base letter in
54:31
heathrow and work so many days abroad or have stay-over days abroad so there's a
54:36
massive implication of employment legislation of where their your employment jurisdiction is
54:41
not just from a tax point of view but also jurisdiction if you wanted to bring an employment tribunal claim a claim about
54:47
employment rights we're talking about flexible awakening that employee put every question for flexible awakening but spending nine months
54:53
abroad did he even have the legal opportunity to to use uk legislation so there's very much
54:59
uh a challenge there and i don't think it's been well tested other than in that currency well
55:05
previous situation of pilots being abroad and where was their normal place of work not just from a tax perspective but
55:11
in terms of control as well yeah and keep in mind you probably would be limited to how
55:16
many days you could do that per year so it would be a very short window but it does give people back to that
55:23
flexibility piece definitely a lot too a lot to work through there we are running out of time
55:28
just gonna ask a couple more quick ones um obviously we're going into winter it's going to be cold we're all
55:34
going to be well if we are home working now we're going to be sitting in our on in our homes we're going to have to be paying a
55:39
lot more for heating we've got some questions about uh kind of is it an employer's responsibility to pay any more of that
55:45
and how do you deal with if you're getting any requests from employees to some to help them out
55:51
in that space and alan from a from your perspective again you're getting into my health and safety
55:57
legislation from memory but there's no legal minimum on how cold the workplace can be
56:03
just dealing with that practical situation the law the fact who's at which it originally comes from it's about a workplace i think being too
56:10
hot or certainly being too cold i don't think many homes will be in a situation where they'll be
56:16
at that really cold temperature just because we all go home of an even and we don't want our pipes freezing so i think the law talks about health
56:23
and safety regulation about extremities so i think the challenge that employees will face is that we no
56:30
claim that the home workplace is so cold or so warm that the employee's got an obligation
56:35
that it's no longer safe i think there's practical considerations about that allowance and having that allowance to be all
56:41
encompassing it's if it's a regular allowance and if it's a one-off allowance putting that into place but again
56:47
if it was a new working relationship you would be saying to the employee you need to have
56:52
a safe warm and able environment and therefore that situation wouldn't occur so if it is going to become a
56:59
permanent place of work then it's up to the employee to make that requirement it's not the employer
57:04
forcing them to work from home and if the employee wants to continue working from home i think my advice is to have that
57:09
homework and arrangement to say you're making that available in the same way that you require the employee to maybe be
57:15
smart or find a safe way of getting to work the employee's not got an obligation to to provide the um uniform normally or
57:22
the vehicle depending on what the way uh role is thank you and johnny from a people
57:28
management perspective any advice on dealing with um when if you're asked for the
57:33
stuff that you might consider not to be your responsibility to deal with as an employer um
57:40
we were you thinking specifically about uh the uh allowances for allowances for
57:46
heating bills for wi-fi that kind of thing i think it's it's a difficult one i mean i think it
57:52
will depend most contracts most employment contracts may not cover it you know some if we're
57:58
thinking more broadly about allowances and pay i think the biggest consideration is going to be commuting costs
58:04
um so i understand that on the grapevine there's been some discussion in hr circles about
58:10
basically can i can i reduce people's pay because they're not having to pay for commuting costs
58:15
now unless you have that uh baked into an employment contract you're not going to be able to
58:21
easily at least and certainly not safely just take a take a cut saying this is
58:28
what i reckon you're spending on commuting and i'm going to pay you less but i think the longer term
58:33
implications um we may see something playing out there so we may see
58:38
that with new jobs coming up that um there there is a sort of a london waiting that's not
58:44
applied or there's not the same allowances made for
58:50
for commuting costs um or london living whatever and i would imagine that those
58:57
costs will uh outstrip any costs that people need to pay for for heating and so on i think if
59:04
employers can give um their workers allowances in the meantime
59:09
uh for the current you know temporary situation then i think that's great i i don't think that it's going to be
59:15
easy to just change by fear people's employment contracts
59:20
uh certainly if it's talking about reducing pay but i do think over the longer term we might see we
59:26
might see changes but there's really there's really positive things about this too if we can if more people are working
59:33
from home this could mean that that fewer people have to come and live in the big smoke um
59:41
and i think you know we see for example one of the major if not the major
59:47
generational differences is in is in housing equity so young people you know pressure to move to london what
59:54
are they going to do they're going to buy a shoe box at some extortion at price that's all they can afford whereas
1:00:00
if we've got more home working then people may we may be less london-centric as a society people
1:00:06
may be able to um you know live other parts of the country
1:00:12
and i think that there are some there are some issues to iron through but there are also some opportunities
1:00:18
with regarding to you know pay and income and all of that thank you johnny i'm going to have to wrap it up there but um it's nice to
1:00:24
finish on a on a positive note about the opportunities to to come um thank you so much johnny
1:00:29
allen and lee for taking part for sharing your insight and experiences thank you so much everybody for watching um for all your questions
1:00:36
and it's also great to see you sharing um with each other on the chat as well it just makes it a much more
1:00:42
interactive experience um a reminder that the webinar and slides will be available later um as alan said we'll
1:00:48
explore with hr inform what kind of resources um we're able to add um and if you keep visiting the cipd
1:00:54
coronavirus hub um everything will be appearing there as we as we add more content we'll be back on the 15th of october um
1:01:02
with a session about redundancies and how to get them right and make them as humane and people centered
1:01:08
as possible um so do come along to that if that's something that you're considering as an organization but that is it from
1:01:14
us for now i hope you found it useful and we shall see you next time thanks very much for watching bye
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you
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