Returning to the workplace: mitigate the divide
Watch our webinar to unpack how employers can best rebuild trust and working relationships as workers are reintroduced into to the workplace.
Watch our webinar to unpack how employers can best rebuild trust and working relationships as workers are reintroduced into to the workplace.
Watch our webinar to unpack how employers can best rebuild trust and working relationships as workers are reintroduced into to the workplace.
Our panel of experts include:
Chaired by Lee Ann Panglea, Head of CIPD Scotland and Northern Ireland, CIPD
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good afternoon everyone my name is lee panglia and i'm delighted to be hosting today's session
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as part of our returning to the workplace series where we'll explore how to rebuild trust
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and how best to tackle any potentially simmering session tensions in the workplace following a
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return to the workplace you'll see from my title that i head up the crpd in scotland in northern ireland
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but for the avoidance of any doubt because i have been asked this in previous webinars what we're discussing
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today is applicable to all our members whenever you're dialing in from not just those of you that are joining
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us from scotland and northern ireland if we think over the past year or actually a bit longer than the past year
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we've seen frontline workers responding flat out to the pandemic while others have been forced into
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homeworking and a number of workers placed on furlough each of us though playing a significant
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role in the uk's response to the pandemic as the workforce slowly begins to come
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back together in whatever um shape it's important for us to recognize that each
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individual's experience has been unique and that the impact on high workloads
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and potential redundancies that have taken place and burnout for some may well have
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impacted morale commitment and for some it may well have eroded trust in their employers
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so today what we're going to do is explore what factors employers need to consider
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when reintroducing and reintegrating what some are referring to as a split
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workforce and how best to manage expectations so considering how we ensure that
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rebuilding trust and working relationships are at the heart at the very heart of our return to
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the workplace and whatever form that takes and so that you can make the best decisions for your
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organization and for your workforce so today i'm delighted to introduce
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three speakers um our panel of three speakers and each of them brings a different perspective to the
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discussion and each speaker has a particularly impressive biography and if i was to
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share it all all of them it would take up the whole session so just to summarise
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i would like to first of all introduce my colleague david d'souza who is cipd director of membership
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and prior to joining the cipd david has a wealth of experience mostly in
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financial services and retail sectors and he brings lots to this discussion but i
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think in particular his experience around organizational development and culture
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corporate ethics and employee engagement i think our areas are particular relevance to
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the discussion today secondly i'd like to introduce professor ross searle
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ross holds the chair in human resource management and occupational psychology at the adam smith business school in the
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university of glasgow rose is a chartered occupational psychologist
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she's a fellow of the bps of the rsa and she's also an academic fellow of the
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cipd and one of rosie's main areas of research is the impact of change in
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organizational trust and in particular the role of the hr m process and that
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and then last but not least i'd like to introduce um andy doddman who is the chief hr
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officer for leed city council which is a uk's second largest local authority which i didn't realize
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andy is responsible for people strategy and hr service delivery for all 14 and a half thousand staff
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directly employed by the council but also around 12 000 employed by
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primary and secondary schools prior to joining local government in 2019
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andy worked in higher education he was a chief operating officer for the university of sheffield
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um and andy is a chartered fellow of the cipd so just quickly before i go any further
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there's some practical housekeeping rules i need to um go through with you um attendees are
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all muted the session has been recorded and will be available on demand via the webinar section of the crpd
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website where you can access all previous webinar recordings but you can also sign up for future ones
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too our next webinar is on the 13th of may and it's on fairness and reward and
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recognition post covert 19. so it's focusing on the unequal impact
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of the pandemic with the unequal impact that pandemic has had in the workforce
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to date and what employers could be doing we should be doing to ensure fairer reward and recognition
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post pandemic to submit questions to the panel please type into the q a
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box not the chat box you can use the chat box and to network with each other and post
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observations but any questions please post them into the q a box before
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i introduce the speakers to share their insight there are um i'd like to draw your attention
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to some of our member benefits in particular some of the those additional resources
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that you may not already be aware of that can support you in the role um of particular interest i
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would like to continue to highlight our covert 19 resources
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and they are updated frequently and we're always updating the faqs and
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do so after each of these webinars and so i would encourage you to continue
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to visit our coronavirus hub and also i'd like to draw attention to
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the fact that the cipd members get individual legal advice by calling our hr and our hr inform
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helpline it's available 24 7. and then finally with regards to our member benefits i
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would like to point out that all cipd members in the uk and ireland can also access our new well-being hub
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and helpline together with award-winning workplace well-being provider health assured
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we now provide cipd members with free help and support 24 7 365 days a year
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via telephone or online consultations with qualified therapists
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all of our members can access the phone number and the online services via the web the membership benefits
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webpage and you'll see more details of this at the end of our session so next let's get on to the content of
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the discussion david will be our first speaker and he'll share cipd's position on trust
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and return to the workplace followed by rose who will explore how distrust may have built up
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over the course of the pandemic and how organizations can rebuild that trust
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then andy last but not least will share some practical insight from how leed city council has been
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managing a multi-layered workforce and maintaining trust throughout we'll
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then open up for questions for the remainder of the session so if i can encourage you as i said
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earlier to post your questions into the q a um function and we'll aim to get through
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as many questions as we can after the speakers have shared their insight so that's it for me i'm going to hand
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over to david now thank you hi everyone my name's
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david de caesar and i'm membership director at the cipd the cipd's position on trust uh is
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probably quite an obvious one trust's a good thing uh it's very useful in organizations
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societally it's absolutely imperative and in fact as a species and it's probably one of the most
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important things we have it's what allows us to thrive and it allows us to thrive more effectively than almost anything else
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because of the ability for us to work together reliably and collaborate without trust
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collaboration is nearly impossible um it's what allows us to deliver and we've gone through a
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period in the last year where there's been incredible trauma incredible stress
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and at times significant division and certainly politically you take that back as a kind of broader window
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of disagreement uh and when you add all those things together it becomes absolutely imperative for
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organizations to have the trust that allows knowledge to flow effectively through organizations and up
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and down to allow people to express their voices and bring their talents and their skills
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to the organization in the most inclusive way possible and and also for people to maintain a
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sense of trust and relationship with the organization and the interesting thing about organizational trust is that it
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manifests in a number of different ways so do you trust your organization
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as a multi-faceted question because to some extent you might trust that the organization will do
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something consistently but you won't necessarily trust the intent that sits behind it or you might trust the organization as a
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whole but you don't trust the colleagues that you work with or quite often you might trust possibly
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the organization and your colleagues but your boss you really have a problem with your boss and you don't trust that
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they have your best interests at heart you don't trust that actually they want your career to flourish you don't trust
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they're not taking credit for your work all of those things happen to a greater or lesser degree
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in most organizations but when you're living in a time where actually we're told that we can't trust the press
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or people distrust the information they're being given by medical professionals then absolutely
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understanding the impact of that an organization what you might need to better do to deliver an environment where people
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can trust each other and know the intent of each other and operate well together is absolutely
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key to organizations so whether you are an organization that intends to keep people working remotely
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and you have challenges or issues with trust within that or with the organization's relationship
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with them or whether you're an organization that actually is starting to bring people back together you're finding they've had profoundly
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different experiences it's a really important period for us to tease apart just a bit more and understand how the
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social dynamics of organizations work so there's a really good example i
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think around the framing of organizations that you'll find in dan ariely's work uh who uh his brilliant job he's the um
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he's heads up the center for advanced hindsight at gt university which is the best name for anything ever and he talks about the
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difference between financial and social transactions and how often we cross them and that creates an
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issue for trust and many organizations will have seen it this year so you start off your positioning as an
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employer quite positively we're a family we like people to feel part of things like we're a family here
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and then actually someone needs to uh go off because they're sick or they're absent and suddenly they find
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there's an impact on their pay or their job security well you don't do that with family members you frame that relationship in
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one way and the reality of that is turning up in a very different way and trust at its heart relies on a few
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things and i know roz will go into far greater detail around some of the psychology and some of the
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research but it relies on a congruence of values quite often so i trust you to do the
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right thing is the really helpful thing rather i trust you to do the wrong thing we normally implicitly say when we trust
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someone that we're trusting their intent aligns with ours or their intents will at least be positive
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but the second thing that i think often isn't focused on enough is that it also relies on consistency
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that i can rely on you to come up with the same kind of decisions or the same kind of efforts or the same
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kind of determinations that you would have done yesterday tomorrow
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and if you can't find that in your organization if there's an inconsistency of approach in values then it becomes impossible for trust to
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flourish because if i turn up each day and i don't know how you're going to be with me either an organizational level or in
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terms of my team or in terms of my boss it's incredibly incredibly challenging to try and build
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any trust in that space so there's a wonderful thing in organizations that exist in a kind of
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feminist so they don't understand what's going on they're not interested in our welfare
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they don't really care and the challenge for hr is to serve the interests of the
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organization and the people in it in such a way that we don't become they
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we don't become the they that people are talking about in organizations they don't get it they don't care isn't
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something that you want associated with hr but we're also brokering a relationship between the organization
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and the individuals within it at times so there's a number of things that can break
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trust and that's quite often a useful way of looking at how you make trust so as you're thinking about your
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next year and as you think about how you're progressing how are you going to make sure that you articulate the decisions that you have
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within the organizations in such a way to create trust in those values and in the consistency
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of applications what does that look like in terms of the policies that you might create or in terms of the principles that you
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might want to operate in the organization and again in terms of the consistency of application
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in terms of your leadership how do you create a space where actually they are clear on what
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they stand for people can rely on them again that consistency base but also
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interestingly far more importantly because we've talked about psychological safety a lot for the last year
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how do you create a trust that there are spaces where people are psychologically safe and can voice their
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concerns in a constructive way so if you really want an organization to be the most productive that it can be
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you need to maximize the contribution that's possible from people and lack of trust is a complete barrier
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to that so hr have got a role to play on reflecting
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on what things we can do that will either help or hinder the process of creation of trust within
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organizations and that starts from the very start of the employment relationship
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have you been honest in your advertising are you bringing people in on a salary that's going to be congruent
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and fair within the kind of organization you're working in and how after that point you communicate
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and support people and the people that create teams and environments within the organization
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to be fair so what's changed over the last year a lot has changed in terms of the external environment
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and the sense of stability that we have if you want to bring that stability back into your workforce
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then it's really important that as hr we understand the role that we play within that but also that we aren't the entire
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um party the leadership team we've got a part to play in that line management it's got an absolutely key role to play
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in that because with the exception of a very few niche organizations
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trust is a genuine uh hygiene factor in terms of performance and in terms of
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the ability to deliver there are some environments where you don't want people to be overly trusting espionage
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would be a good example of that you sort of want people to understand to spot a lie if you work in
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fraud prevention you probably want people are quite expecting but in most environments you want the starting point to be
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one-off trust in your colleagues trust that the organization will do the right thing and trust that that will be
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reliable and consistent i'm getting people into a position where they build that trust
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through working together through examining the boundaries of it and through communicating clearly
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it's absolutely something that hr can have a clear and hugely important role to play but
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the other thing that i'll throw in before i kind of hand over to ross is their reputation professionally
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there's a barrier to that which is that quite often hr is seen as on the side of the organization rather
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than the individual and that is a perception that the only way you can shift over time
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uh the only way you can genuinely get movement and momentum on that is by being different so creating an
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environment where actually people can trust in and will come to hr and be psychologically
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safe and feel that that's an environment they can talk and speak up in and be treated fairly in the same way you would want from the
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leadership team so i think as a profession we have a historical challenge that we
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need to meet up so i do understand having worked in a range of different organizations why people might be skeptical and
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mistrust hr so we've got that to deal with i guess on our own front lawn where we have a
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broader challenge and a broader opportunity to help drive curate and support more trust within
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organizations particularly for those of you who are working in areas of knowledge work where teamwork is critical it's
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impossible impossible to be at your best if people don't trust each other
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and they don't trust the responses that they'll get around them hugely important thing for us to deliver i know roz will talk uh more about some
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of the research that sits behind it and andy will talk about some of the practical things that they've been doing there but i look
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forward to joining in the chat at the end to try and bring things together but i trust that you'll have an
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excellent rest of the webinar um thank you david for that
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for sharing some of the challenges and opportunities and the hr face and brokering
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a relationship between the organization and the individual within um within each organization
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and delivering that environment where people can trust each other to collaborate communicate
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and i guess deliver productively um as you've said so now i'd like to um
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hand over to ross who's going to share a little bit more around the evidence and insight
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and thank you ross thank you very much and thank you cipd for giving me an opportunity to
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wear a dress because we have to take these small bonuses so what i'm going to be talking about here
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building on what david was talking about is really an idea about preserving trust
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so it's all very well to think about building trust and repairing trust but i actually think we've got a really
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important mandate here particularly as hr professionals in terms of preserving trust
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and paying attention to what currently is happening within the business can i have the next slog please
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so the return to work is going to be a very anxiety provoking situation for a
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number of people um i was talking to a friend over the weekend who had been backing at work
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yesterday last week and ended up uncharacteristically dissolving into
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tears and she was really shocked by her reaction she was also really shocked
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that nobody around her came and connected and helped so she is now coming back into work
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again with another big question mark going on in her head about is this the workplace that i expected it
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to be um is this somewhere that i want to remain working in and i think for a number of people this is likely
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to be the case next slide so if we look here trust really becomes
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to the fore in situations where we have uncertainty and disruption which i mean the pandemic
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has done this to everybody with knobs on but also where we have a heightened sense of vulnerability
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and that can make us because we are human animals it can make us very very focused on
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keeping safe as dave is highlighted but that really is very important because it
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gives us a focus that's about that safety issue and in particular that means that
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we pay attention to things that have gone wrong things that have been negative because
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those are likely to make us feel unsafe so trust is really a very salient
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issue now if we think i'm going to be highlighting and some three key issues here
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so let's think about the experiences of the pandemic which my next slide has on them for many
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people it's been this kind of skydiving experience in the sense of out of the plane not quite knowing
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what's going to happen and then trying to link up with people in different ways you'll see on my next
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slide what i've got here is um a synthesis of some research that
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we did a while ago on looking at how do people in organizations respond to change
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and particularly crisis and you can see we've got the top team um in one of the corners where
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people are working together and we found that this group were able to maintain trust they worked together they communicated
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they shared the values and they made sure that they were able to operate effectively
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but i think that is often a rarity particularly in the pandemic
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but i think also we have to remember that many of the people who have come together to form teams to help
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organizations deliver in these times actually are very tired and have been doing that if you like
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like holding by their fingertips to the situation so that may not be sustainable so there may
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have been a team but they're a very tired team now and we need to come back and think about that
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so you'll see then down if you go on the diagonal you see the person uncovering the question mark
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we call these watchful followers so these are people that have noticed that something isn't quite right
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and they are alert but the key issue for this group of employees is that they need a conversation about
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that concern and then the resolution of that and then they'll flip back into being a truster
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but if you don't have that conversation then they're going to be thinking are there any more things under this carpet
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that you're not telling me about so again i've been focusing on that then in the middle of the screen you saw
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the person with the the big x that is somebody who's really registered that it's the
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leaders in this organization as david alluded to earlier they really haven't stepped up
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they really haven't done things we are a great organization it's these people that are in charge of us that we have to be
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very wary about and the way the messages that they need are going to be very different than the
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person in the in the middle there with the big question mark coming out from them we call these and concerned loyalists
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so these are people who notice something isn't quite right in your organization may need to be heard they
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want to share those concerns they want to tell you about things that aren't going right so that trust can be
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preserved but also so that things will not spiral out of control for them and for other people so they
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really are a hugely important resource to make sure that you're listening and trying to see where are the people
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coming from this from then the person with the job but well they're the person who they kind of
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understood what their job is and now they really don't because all of the pandemic all of the way of working
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means that they don't quite understand how do i do this when i used to do that in the old world as it were so again we
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call these identity shifters and their concerns are quite different there may be a whole group of people
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around them who are feeling the same way and are starting to doubt and disconnect
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but again these people need to be listened to they need to help to make that bridge
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into trusting again and then in the top corner you can see we've got somebody exploding these are
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angry distrusters these are a very small group of people that we found in our research
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but they are very negative they've often been on a journey through some of the bits in the middle
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of this uh diagram and they finally ended up in this point where they're often stuck
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record in the organization so people have stopped listening to them which actually makes them very isolated
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and can make them quite dangerous in terms of what they could do to harm the organization or other people in it
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but these people have really changed from trust into distrust and as a result of that
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it's very hard to pull them back because suddenly they are not able to segment
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and see things in a proportionate way they tend to be much more extreme with this distressing now distrustful at
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these angry disgusters is a really exhausting place to be so what we found is that either people leave the
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organization or they drop down into that bottom little person that we call the apathetic
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who sadly has to stay in the organization often from pensions and other issues that can strain and
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make them have to stay even though they actually don't want to and they're very disconnected and they're not really interested in
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trust because they they just want to leave the organization ultimately but the reason why i've put
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all of these up is to remind you about what is the communication that's going on in your business
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have you understood where are these different groups because i will guarantee that
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it's about segmenting that communication is about listening and understanding and if you're able to do that it will
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make that return to work so much more helpful for people because they'll feel that the things that
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they're concerned about are being addressed next slide so what this
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has really underscored is the emotion and the issue of dynamics of emotion so
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as i mentioned earlier on this friend who was returning to work suddenly finding themselves
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on this kind of emotional rollercoaster that they really weren't expecting and so you'll see on the next slide what
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we find in these events is that you tend to get these two different types of negative emotions
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so one is all about fear and anxiety and that shuts down our thinking and
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makes us pull away from things so that we can avoid and try and get away
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but the second emotion that we can often find ourselves in is anger anger why was i put in this
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position anger about the situation and that is a mobilizer so it makes people want to
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engage to fight back and push now the reason that i mention these two emotions
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is that they're really important in fueling counterproductive work behaviors they're really important in fueling
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moral disengagement which allows people to do bad stuff but feel vindicated in doing it and that
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they were right to do it so again we've got to pay attention to the emotions that people are feeling
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if you look at the next slide this is a study that we did and i'll put the resources
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um for you to look at and what we identified here were these three specific um aspects that leaders
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and hr need to do and you'll see the second one of those is what's called emotional embodying
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and what this is about is about recognizing that people have these very strong emotions
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particularly at the moment and helping them work through it if you look at the next slide
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this practice is all about helping people manage their vulnerability and it's a
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mechanism about getting them to acknowledge their emotions and as i said earlier on that might be a
27:56
real surprise to them that they're feeling this strength of emotion but it has to be dissipated in a
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particular way so it's about helping people and to recognize that they're going to have an emotional response so that they're not
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shocked and surprised and feel let down by themselves but it's also helping them work through
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these things and that can involve coaching it can involve reminding people to look after
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each other and particularly what we find in terms of trust and organizational trust is
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that benevolent respect is about showing people that you care about them
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and i think really critically in terms of helping them with their emotions next slide please so
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if you like as a call to arms i think that hr has a really critical role and actually a very unique and special
28:46
role in managing this transition back into it next slide please
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it's all about helping organizations to be resilient organizations to be able to preserve the trust that
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they have within them but also it's about helping them to do that in a
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dynamic way in a way that happens over time so in particular there may be small
29:10
groups of people within your workplace who suddenly have realized that they have a whole range of skills that they never
29:17
thought that they had they've learned so much more about themselves and their resilience and what they can offer but there'll
29:24
also be a lot of people who are wobbling and who are very damaged by their experiences that
29:31
may relate to nothing that's happened within their work situations so i think here particularly thinking about mental
29:37
health and mental health first aiders is critically important now i know that you've got something coming up that's
29:44
looking at wages and in particular the fairness around wages is a really important issue in terms of
29:50
restoring but it's not just about getting back to the normal next slide please so on this slide i
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i've created some resources that you'll be able to have a look at and the top one is a free animation that
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builds on what i talked about earlier and then the middle one is a free and
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very practice orientated paper all around preserving trust in organizations i'm looking forward to
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your questions thank you thanks rose and for sharing so much
30:21
insight and so much content for us to consider um
30:26
around the importance of understanding our employees pandemic experience
30:31
and i love the the idea of segmenting your workforce and understanding um
30:37
how to communicate and better with them i'm sure we'll have lots of questions around that
30:42
um later on but um if i could pass on to andy now
30:48
um to share his experiences of light thank you very much lee and
30:54
good afternoon everybody i hope everybody is uh well says lee rightly says what i want to do is just share with you a very brief case
31:02
study of the work we're doing here at leeds city council around our future working arrangements
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um before i uh get on to the case doing some of the practical application just a very quick bit of background
31:14
uh from me first so the next slide you'll just see um a bit about myself and the city
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council so i'm the chief hr officer uh at the council um i'm recently appointed as the vice president of
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epma which is the public service uh people managers association which is a professional
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hr body that represents uh public sector hr people um as lee mentioned at the start
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of the session um these city council you can see where i work in the the lovely building of the civic hall in the centre of leeds
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and we're the second largest local authority in the uk and when you add in this the staff that
31:52
we directly employ together with our primary secondary schools across the city um we do employ around 26 27 000
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staff um as some of you know when when you talk to people about working from council they always assume that
32:08
um we're the people that have to worry about potholes and emptying bins which is true we do do
32:14
that and indeed we empty about 2 million bins a year in the city
32:19
as a large council of course we do run a whole range of other services as well so there's something like
32:24
450 different services we provide to our local communities um and that's everything from sort of
32:30
the a to z so a in terms of our adoption services and up to zed we do employ
32:36
uh some zookeepers so we're we're a very broad um and quite complicated organization
32:43
so just in terms of our future working arrangement so we launched a program um in early march of this year
32:52
and probably the first thing to stress for everybody on this is that we really wanted to spend a fair bit of time talking to our workforce
32:59
really about the drivers for the change so we didn't just want the change to be described within the
33:05
remit of the immediate in-year response to coved and obviously the
33:10
pandemic of course has acted as a real catalyst um on a lot of the change that our
33:16
colleagues have already talked about but it's it's really recognizing that we've been on this journey actually as as
33:22
large employees for some time anyway so we spent a fair bit of time talking about those other big drivers for change
33:29
across the city and across the organization whether they're sort of demographic changes
33:35
behaviors our customer expectations of course are changing we have a range of different financial
33:42
challenges social economic factors political factors you name it so we've been focusing very much on
33:48
presenting if you like that much bigger broader context of change within the workplace rather
33:55
than an in-year response to the pandemic um we tried to present a lot of our
34:00
thinking a lot of our practical application in that kind of transformational longer term uh program of change and
34:09
and activity and often when we're talking to staff about this some of the narrative we've been using is is not
34:15
just talking about place of work but much more about the future of work
34:20
so i have to say to staff that whilst we are interested in talking to you about where you'll be working in the future sort of post
34:27
pandemic we often say this is as important that we talk to you about how you'll be working not just where you'll be working
34:33
so so that's sort of some of the common themes and common narratives that we are
34:38
uh really sort of introducing and talking quite open directly to our staff about
34:44
just in terms of the the journey and the activities on the next slide you'll see really quite a busy slide so apologies for this
34:52
this is effectively a bit of some youtube youtube videos that were produced for our workforce
34:58
which effectively is an animation taking our stuff through the journey that we would like them to go
35:03
through between now or march on the start of this probably up to june and july and beyond
35:10
because the time i can't show you the animation so you got in front of you just a screenshot of it and it is quite
35:15
a busy slide that's a key thing just to draw your attention to is if you like that
35:20
middle row um and you can see a big blue triangle in the middle of it and effectively that
35:26
is a key issue here for us because this recognizes that we're not a homogenous workforce as a
35:32
large employer and we do employ people right across the city but engage in a
35:38
whole range of different working environments and of course working patterns so of
35:43
course we've got a lot of frontline staff who've been working really flat out throughout the last 12
35:49
months of the covered pandemic our frontline staff but of course we've had lots of staff
35:54
who've been peripatetic those working in and out of the um community
36:00
and of course we've got lots of individuals who are working in our partner organizations whether that's the nhs
36:07
and not not least of course we've got around 8 000 staff who are office-based staff
36:12
who've been predominantly working from home since march of last year
36:18
and that's a larger 50-50 split with our workforce so half of them have been uh frontline working as normal the rest
36:25
of them working remotely working from home since pandemic
36:30
so what we've done with a lot of our comms at the moment is not just talk to that 8 000 staff who
36:36
have been working from home and following the government's roadmap as to how we get get them gradually and
36:42
safely back into the workplace we've really wanted to say something positive and something open
36:47
about the whole of that workforce community whatever kind of working patterns they've been engaged in you can see that
36:54
on the right what we have done is we've developed a very simple straightforward pledge
36:59
for all of our staff whatever their working pattern whatever their working environment has been
37:05
i'm not sure how clear it may be for you on the slide so apologies if it's not but on the yellow circles to the left
37:11
you can see some of the content of our pledge to everybody so that's all of that 27 000 stuff that we've referenced and
37:18
there you can see some reference to some of the really simple practical um pleasure we want to
37:24
make to everybody which is sort of augment and improving their working environment focus very much on making sure that
37:31
their work and space and promotes their health their safety their wellness
37:36
making sure people have the right kit and tools to do their job but also teasing out some of those other
37:41
key issues that are important for us in terms of promoting and emphasizing the low-carbon agenda really making sure
37:49
that all of our staff that their working environments bring the best out of them um that enable them to be productive to
37:56
be creative and also have fun in the workplace so it's a very simple pledge but one of the key things we really
38:02
wanted to do is talk to everybody whatever their working environment has been over the last
38:07
year and we wanted to say something to everybody focusing perhaps a little bit for a
38:13
minute on the 8 000 staffing leads who have been working from home and
38:19
what we have done is we have developed a very simple model in light of the government's roadmap and on the next slide you'll just see
38:26
how that model has panned out and i just want to fairly quickly share with you that model
38:32
first thing's there to say is is um with those 8 000 colleagues working from home
38:37
effectively what we said is to enable you to develop your future working environments or your future
38:43
working arrangements and we reckon that it's very much going to be a compromise
38:48
and a balance between three different pillars and you can see in the model what those three different pillars are
38:54
so on the orange on the top left you can see here that this is very much about
39:00
individual choice so here we are saying to all of our 8 000 staff we want you to have some sense of
39:06
control some sense of ownership in determining your future working pattern so it's not just going to be
39:12
using that kind of paternalistic way telling you what your pattern will be you want to hear what your own personal
39:18
preferences are based on your own experiences and david and also ross talked about the unique experience and
39:25
the lived experiences people have had and we really want to capture that and the way that we have
39:32
captured that so far is invite everybody to complete an online survey um and we've got about sort of about
39:39
seven thousand six and a half seven thousand staff that have completed that that they've set out those personal
39:45
uh preferences and their own ideas and also of course we're encouraging individuals to have that one-to-one
39:51
conversations with their managers too so really have that open and honest dialogue so we can really
39:57
understand personal choice saying all of that of course personal choice can't be the only
40:03
determinant for future working arrangements and you can see on the right hand side this the yellow bit of the the
40:10
wheel um that we really want to make sure that we capture service need so what our customers are
40:17
expecting and demanding what the whole generic teams are wanting and what we've done here is we've
40:23
developed a manager toolkit which is enabling service managers and heads of service to actually
40:30
think about their service needs and service expectations and and throw that into the mix and the
40:36
final bit of the jigsaw if you like the final bit of the model is a bit at the bottom the green bit
40:41
this this effectively is recognizing that there are of course some corporate wide parameters or
40:47
corporate wide expectations based on our strategy based on our resources what we can afford to deliver and where
40:54
and also in our values um and that also has to be thrown into that sense of
40:59
sort of blend and compromise between those three different dimensions so you can see really here we're talking
41:06
very much about that good old-fashioned hr model of me we announced so the me being about the individual the
41:11
wii being about managers and the teams that people are operating in locally mdo's being that collective
41:19
wide parameters and expectations and we spend a lot of time reminding our
41:25
workforce and talking to our workforce about those three different dimensions in terms of how we set out the this idea
41:33
of those resources at corporate parameters the way we've done this effectively is
41:38
just develop a series of principles or expectations around these three areas you can see at the bottom of that slide
41:45
which is principles around people around place and around technology
41:50
very quickly and finally for me if i just spend a little bit of time just sharing with you some examples of each
41:55
of those principles because it it may help you if you're developing something similar so the next slide you can see just a
42:02
snapshot of some of those principles in each of those three areas probably the ones most interesting for
42:08
this audience are those around people and a lot of people will have read in the past about organizations setting out
42:15
very clear corporate expectations about how staff should split their time between
42:20
the workplace and working from home as a council what we're saying is that we do want and we have said to everybody we
42:27
are expecting people to split their time in the future in the long term between working from home and
42:33
as a workplace and we're effectively saying that we're expecting the majority of people to spend most of their time
42:40
working from home so we're not given a percentage but we're just giving some of broad parameters to give people a little bit
42:46
of corporate guidance but recognizing the other two dimensions service need and
42:51
personal choice play into that factor too one thing we have said quite explicitly
42:58
though which sort of teases out some of the issues raised by david and roz as well which is
43:03
whatever work and pattern people do end up with we are suggesting that everybody should
43:09
at some point and we're saying regularly which is different from frequently but regularly should come into the workplace and have
43:16
that connectivity and connection with their team and their manager so we don't want people to work exclusively
43:23
from home we don't want people necessarily to uh always work on the go or remotely we
43:28
really do value that sense of people touching in coming into the workplace meeting their team
43:35
but the the degree to which they do that will depend very much on those other bits of the dimension so
43:41
service need and personal choice the other principles you can see there terms of technology
43:47
so there's obviously their commitment for muslim terms and making sure people have the right kit
43:52
and also that we're trying to build or struggle perhaps with that user i.t equipment in terms of uh
43:59
use of hybrid meetings which has proven challenging um interestingly some of the key
44:05
principles in terms of space and place um i'm sure a lot of you
44:11
have done a lot of thinking and uh planning on this but one of the key things that we're saying now is that when
44:16
individuals do come into the workplace what we are saying is that people come into the workplace for very different reasons
44:23
than perhaps they did 12 months ago or 18 months ago so when people do touch down and come
44:28
into our workplace they will do it predominantly to interact with others and predominantly to collaborate
44:35
so if it's about doing your emails or talking to people on the phone well you can do that anywhere you can do this at
44:40
home you can do that in a cafe you can do that elsewhere but we want you to touch down and meet with people collaborate with
44:46
people in the workplace and therefore as a result our buildings are now currently
44:51
being redesigned accordingly so all of those sort of banks of desks are coming out and and replace them on
44:57
much more of that collaborative open space and some of our own buildings they're not all done yet
45:03
but some of them now look and feel a bit more like coffee shops you know with comfier seating and more opportunity for
45:09
people to to meet round bigger broader tables and one thing we have done though as you
45:15
can see there were the second principle in the workspace issue that everybody however will still have a
45:20
what we're calling a team zone so whatever team you're working in you will have a base you'll have a home
45:26
where your team will be predominantly based so that sense of connectivity and connection to your team to the working environment
45:33
we still really want to maintain uh final thing for me really is just the
45:39
final slide here um just pulling out some of the issues that other colleagues have raised so
45:44
we're very mindful about that sense of working with colleagues and building that sense of
45:50
commitment and trust whilst we go through this journey and it is a journey we only started it in march
45:55
and really a lot of this won't land until sort of june july august and then obviously we're in for the long
46:01
haul some of the obvious things we're doing fairly straightforward a lot of specific support for staff so
46:07
there's a lot of number crunching and data collection so we're pulling out all of that stuff from the toolkits and
46:13
and the surveys so we understand what people are saying to us and and how they feel
46:18
um as you can expect we're doing lots of road shows going around so lots of our buildings and meeting with our teams to
46:24
have the dialogue and conversation and also i think ros you talked about
46:29
this idea of sort of very much sort of listening and engaging with people and we are inviting people to contact us
46:36
and in lots of different ways if they've got any particular fears or questions or worries um
46:42
and people can call in they can email they will use our social media accounts and actually people are doing that it's
46:49
really interesting that people are asking us really practical questions that people are anxious about
46:54
and we really need to make sure we have an outlook for that and in the survey that i mentioned we have invited people to give us a call
47:00
back if they're particularly worried about issues so there's a lot of that one-to-one engagement ongoing
47:07
i think that's the final thing to say is that sense of assurance because we are very mindful about those issues of trust
47:13
and so we're doing quite a lot of warming people up to that change of working environments that change of
47:19
ways of working that we referenced so in terms of the workplace to change that we've done a lot of videos and photos
47:26
uh introducing what they look like inviting people to sort of phase their return so they feel
47:32
that sense of confidence about their new work environment assuring them about some of the health
47:37
and safety fears um as you can expect there's quite a lot of that ongoing and i think perhaps a final point just
47:44
raises is linking into that wider people context which is really important to us so this isn't just about
47:51
uh future ways of working it's recognizing there's a much bigger broader people context here
47:56
so again colleagues have talked about the role managers need to play here so we're spending quite a bit of time
48:02
thinking and reflecting on how we support our managers in terms of giving them the skills and the
48:07
confidence and the expertise to manage workplace workforce change to manage performance to manage
48:14
productivity because all of those are going to be challenges for our our workforce and our managers
48:20
we've often banged the drum about that relentless focus on well-being because that is underpinning throughout
48:25
all of the last 12 months but certainly will be in the future and what we have done is we're trying to adopt
48:31
that kind of benefits realization approach where we've surveyed probably to death but nevertheless we've surveyed quite a
48:37
lot of our workforce about how they feel in terms of their wealth their health
48:43
and their happiness in the workplace and we want to sort of do that sort of before and after so we can sense whether or not people
48:50
are having that sense of um you know confidence and and being comfortable in that change program that we're
48:56
developing our final thing really is just say that we tried to work in partnership with a lot of our city
49:02
and system-wide partners so what we're saying is that we're not just working in isolation we are working with our
49:08
partners whether it's the nhs other big city employers and partly because it just generates a
49:13
whole range of different opportunities for our workforce to work in different creative ways and i think it again assures our staff
49:20
that we're not in it on our own we can work collectively think collaboratively and really as a
49:25
city and a system wide so that's our journey to date um with any it feels that we've only been on it
49:31
for a very short period of time so i wanted to share that with you and mindful of timely so if i just pause
49:37
there so there's the opportunity for q a um thank you very much andy for sharing
49:45
um your organization's experience and journey to date and i guess highlighting the importance of
49:50
communicating those big drivers to change for change and the broader context so it's not just
49:57
considered i guess and then your response to the pandemic i think is how you and described it so thank you everyone
50:04
and i'm going to quickly go on to try and answer in the 10 minutes that we've got as many questions as possible
50:10
and kind of combine some of them together and so so i guess if i could ask
50:17
you those and to start with on there's there's a question early on in
50:22
the session around how can we best identify which groups our people fall into and
50:28
then a kind of related question is um from listing i'd love to know if the
50:33
pandemic has resulted in more distinct and separate groups in organizations and how those are these
50:40
are being actively managed engaged and brought back into one organization so how do we identify where our folk
50:48
sets and then what maybe could we be doing about it which rose and maybe andy you
50:53
can pick up on please i think i think there's a number of ways that can be done and it was
50:58
great to hear andy talking about the kind of surveys that they're doing in their workforce
51:03
and to really identify some of those the uh we put a link to the animation that
51:09
we created it's a seven-minute animation that kind of spells out each of these different types and how you could spot them but also
51:16
what could be done to help them and enable them particularly the angry distrusters to get back on track
51:23
um and i think in terms of the pandemic and more segmentation of uh workforces
51:30
and we don't know we we've got a number of things that we've been doing i've been part of a longitudinal
51:36
um survey that we've taken four different readings with about several thousand people and we're just
51:42
number crunching at the minute so we will come back to you but i think as i tried to put into my slides i think
51:47
we've got to remember that this is a dynamic situation so just because i'm worried and uncertain
51:53
today doesn't mean that that is going to be a permanent thing there might be some aspects of the anxiety that are retained but
52:01
i think over time we will start feeling more confident about things and so we we need to be very careful
52:07
about not to pigeonhole and make people feel that they're they're kind of ossified in their responses it's a journey we're
52:14
all on a journey um and it's about helping them to be able to raise a hand and kind of say i
52:19
need a bit of help here would you have anything to add to that
52:26
andy from an organisation point of view it's fully mirroring what rosa said
52:31
because i think that's sort of the issue that it is a journey and one of the things to try to build in i guess is
52:37
that sort of feedback loop and recognizing that whilst people are going through and we i've talked about sort of balance
52:42
instead of three different dimensions and as a result you know an answer being popped out you know in terms of this is
52:49
where we've got to as an individual but also corporately but recognizing because it is a journey
52:55
and we've not done this before and like a lot of the hr things you tackle you know you've done before in a different
53:00
guys and all in a different way this is quite new to us um so one of the things that we've
53:05
wanted to do is sort of build in that evaluation feedback loop so when people do
53:10
uh or represent sort of some comfort to where they've got to where they want to
53:16
manage their working environments in the future they have that opportunity to reflect to review to go back to different
53:22
sources of information to say right this this is working for me now but may not work in the future
53:28
and and that's that's sort of quite a challenge and i think one of the biggest challenges i've had and i think some of the people have
53:33
put on the q a which is this idea of how prescriptive are you so you want individuals to have that sense of
53:40
control and choice and you want managers to give them some some you know sense of
53:46
ability direct what works for their service delivery because they've got a job of work to do
53:51
and that sometimes can conflict and it's that kind of delicate balance between all of those which is a real tricky thing and i don't think
53:58
we've yet seen where we're going to get with that yet so so i i think it's it's building in a lot of that sort of
54:04
evaluation and feedback so it's not it's not a good answer but it's just saying i think it's going to
54:09
be quite bumpy along the way but i think if we keep the if we keep the dialogue going hopefully we'll be able to respond to it
54:15
as best we can okay no thank you for that before i move on to the next question there's quite a few questions
54:21
and a saying can we share the youtube videos yeah yeah i can so
54:29
it's it is on youtube so think maybe if i go through you lit you lean just give you the link to that
54:34
it's only about sort of four or five minutes long so it's not very it's easy watching so i'm
54:39
happy to do that yes no thank you for that i know lots of people have been asking for that and also if there's anything you could
54:45
share on the toolkits yeah sure yeah i'm sure we can do that um thank you so
54:50
we will share that afterwards um somehow my colleagues are probably thinking how we're going to do that
54:55
um but we will so so we have a question which is something from a kind of different perspective so
55:03
does there come a point where trust in the organization is so damaged that it is a broken
55:09
it's that it is broken thinking about how to realistically handle saboteurs how does hr manage in
55:16
this scenario david would you maybe like to pick up on that and followed by rosin
55:21
maybe andy yeah i think employment relationships can be
55:27
completely broken down that can happen at scale um we've seen organizations make
55:32
decisions that are entirely odds with what their people might have expected and it's incredibly difficult to to come back
55:38
from that and i i think that concept of saboteur is a really interesting one because obviously
55:44
it values misalignment there but actually if what you're talking about is employees being noisy in a
55:50
situation where something wrong is happening or they're not getting treated fairly i think actually that's a natural outcome of the
55:56
system so i'm not sure you handle it so much as build better relationships but there comes a point yeah where if
56:03
things are broken down to such a level there has to be a parting of the ways or there has to be a genuine
56:09
reconciliation based on trust and understanding and that's why it's so important i think the thread going through many of the
56:15
questions actually it's just a question of having adult relationships being able to say unapologetically to
56:21
people but it has to be ritual we have to make these decisions but giving enough transparency of information so they understand why
56:29
okay no thank you for that does any of us would you have anything to add to that i think it's about understanding how
56:35
that breakup in the relationship has happened we certainly find with angry distrustrious it was often that a difficult
56:41
conversation early on had not been happening and so people ended up having very unrealistic
56:48
expectations about what was going to happen for them and because managers felt
56:53
ill-equipped to say difficult things to people and so i would counsel i think as andy's
57:00
highlighted lots of support around line managers at this time is really really important but i think as they're kind of
57:06
collaborating to that as well for me to say um it's it's trying to understand
57:12
could it be that actually you have a rogue individual who's creating other rogue individuals
57:18
so it could be that your person who the trust has been broken with is actually um a product
57:26
or something bad that's happening in your in the rest of the organization so certainly just identifying them as
57:33
your problem child and not understanding why they're your problem child could be a very short-sighted issue
57:40
we've got on the 11th of june uh with the ewok impact incubator we're
57:46
launching a new animation that's going to be looking a little bit about how these things can
57:51
spiral in organizations whether through stress or it could be somebody being very deliberately
57:57
counterproductive but i i always counsel be very concerned because just removing somebody
58:03
doesn't get rid of your problem and also if you do it wrongly you can actually make a small issue an
58:09
awful lot worse so yeah be careful well thank you for that rose
58:16
um we are running out of time but um i'd quite like to ask a question that specifically aimed
58:23
at andy which is on a different topic again love the pledge to all staff what kind
58:28
of response have you had from staff andy yeah it's fairly early days i think two
58:35
responses i would say first of all um a warm welcome that we are not just
58:40
having this dialogue with people who have been um you know working from home for a long
58:46
time so people are very pleased that we're we are reaching out and wanting to talk to everybody um so it's very much
58:54
that message that everybody's important and particularly recognizing frontline staff who have worked so hard and
58:59
timelessly um you know throughout um the last uh year so there's that general sense of
59:05
support and commitment that that's the right thing to do i guess the second thing to recognize of course is that the
59:11
anxiety about so what what will it look like you know differently for me
59:16
and obviously then landing it and delivering it um in all all of our many sites across the
59:21
city and all of our hundreds of different services is going to be really hard work so we got this difficulty now of trying
59:28
to identify what it would mean for each individual service some servers that may be very practical
59:34
things just in terms of improving the working environment or improving the comms and communication that ros has
59:39
talked about others it will be much more deep rooted longer term activity so we have to manage expectations that
59:47
some of the problems and challenges some people have in some of their working environments are going to take us some time to tackle
59:53
so it's probably good that we're doing it but query question mark has to so how what's
59:59
it mean for me and how long will it take and we're trying to now manage that expectations have a bit of a road map a long term
1:00:05
view um and then i guess invite me back next year and i'll give you an update as to
1:00:11
how that's gone thank you for that that's it you should
1:00:16
never offer especially oh you're probably right i'm backing and share
1:00:22
um so as expected we are out of time and we do always try to finish
1:00:28
um and to quite keep to strict timings for these session
1:00:33
sessions so thank you to everyone who submitted a question we tried our best to answer as many of
1:00:39
them as possible and but we do review the questions that haven't been
1:00:44
answered and as i said at the beginning if um we're frequently updating and
1:00:49
particularly the faq section of our coronavirus hub and so we will read the questions reflecting
1:00:56
what may have may not been answered and actually we can try and reflect um those questions in
1:01:02
the faqs section and i see that um my colleagues have posted that when we
1:01:09
upload the presentation to our covert hub later to the website and
1:01:14
we can upload some of the other resources that have been referred to or requested
1:01:20
um so it is clearly a lot for us to consider as um we would um
1:01:28
return to progress our plans to return to the workplace um the webinar will be available on
1:01:34
demand later with the resources as well the slides and do keep an eye out for future
1:01:40
webinars as i mentioned um our next webinar is on the 13th of may
1:01:46
and i'd like to make a final reminder to all of you around the new well-being
1:01:52
support or the more recently launched well-being support and for our members in the uk
1:01:57
and ireland and that's delivered with our workplace well-being provider health assured
1:02:03
and then just finally i would just really really like to thank um our speakers from today who i'm sure
1:02:10
you will have a great shared great insight knowledge expertise and we're very genuine um
1:02:16
in their responses to the questions and throughout their presentation and as with everything that's related to
1:02:23
covert it's fast changing we don't have all the answers um or not all the
1:02:28
time anyway um but i'm sure you'll agree that they've shared a lot of great insight
1:02:33
and content and a lot for us to reflect on and as andy said he's going to come back
1:02:39
so um thank you everyone have a lovely
1:02:46
afternoon
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