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Communicating HR Policies

August 5th, 2009 @ 4:05 pm

Categories: Pooling Resources

Tags: Human Resources, Policy, Company Policy, Melissa Lourenco

I believe this is an important topic because it is where some companies fall down and open themselves up to litigation.

Regularly communicating HR policies that spell out accepted codes of conduct and define breaches such as harassment and bullying build a better defence for the employer — it makes it less likely for an employee to say in their defence “I didn’t know what I was doing was wrong”.

Company policies are supposed to be living documents and should be updated in line with any changes to laws or address any potential HR issues such as the explosion of social media/networking use around the world. Updating the policy is the first step, but the most crucial part of the process is communicating the changes to staff.

There are a number of ways you can communicate policies to your employees:

  • Distribute a handbook to all employees and have them sign an acknowledgement that they have read and understood all policies contained in the handbook
  • Have a public HR library of full and up-to-date policy information — public drive, wiki, intranet etc
  • For new or amended policies, notify staff of the changes via email with key points highlighted
  • Regular brown bag sessions of policy updates or changes

How do you make sure all employees are aware of your policies? How do you keep them updated? Let me know what you think in the talkback section at the end of this post.

 
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    Michael0105

    08/10/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Communicating HR Policies

    I believe that it is equally important that your policies and manuals are accurately "sold" i.e. the company doesn't promise something that it can't or won't deliver, e.g. "An exciting and rewarding career"

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