Pub. 10 2021 Issue 4
34 L ike most business leaders, you or another member of your leadership team has had to deal with issues involving employees. It could be someone not following your organization’s dress code. Perhaps one of your employees is habitually late to work or is not performing job functions up to organizational expectations. Maybe it is employee insubordination. In some cases, the complication may involve a conflict between employees. Issues like these are problematic and can certainly affect your company as a whole if left unresolved. However, addressing employee relations problems does not have to be overwhelming for leaders in your company. The following are five tips from Syndeo, a Wichita-based outsourced human resources provider, to help Kansas banks handle matters of employee relations. 1. Ensure managers and supervisors are appropriately trained and equipped to handle employee issues. Training can be done with the help of an external third party or through internal human resources personnel. Either way, the objective is to empower managers and supervisors to handle day-to-day employee matters independently. FiveWays Kansas Banks Can Better Handle Day-To-Day Employee Matters Connor Cross, Director of HR for Syndeo, says training should incorporate an overview of strategies for progressive discipline, which is designed to address issues consistently and work with employees on ways to resolve them. Cross says the supervisory training should also incorporate overviews of employment laws and ways banks can avoid potential legal issues regarding how employee issues are handled. 2. Utilize an employee handbook and clearly defined policies to give your bank a framework to set organizational expectations. Implementing an employee handbook requires more than downloading a generic template. Cross says employee handbooks should be tailored to meet your organization’s needs and treated as a living document that can be modified to ensure it is an accurate reflection of your bank’s actual practices. A strong employee handbook will also outline the policies and procedures for your bank and ensure progressive discipline is handled consistently and employment laws are applied correctly. Additionally, handbooks help employees be familiar with industry-specific policies and regulations. 3. Address employee issues in a timely manner. Letting issues go unresolved for long periods can make matters worse. Do some employees have difficulty getting to work on time or dress in a manner that does not align with your bank’s dress code? Cross says to address the issue and do not let employees assume the unwanted behavior is acceptable because nothing is said to address the situation. 4. Handle matters – that do not involve gross misconduct – through coaching and level-setting expectations. Be willing to demonstrate you are eager to work with your employees to resolve issues. Addressing employee relations matters does not have to be controversial. “It’s just a conversation,” Cross says. “Managers and supervisors should be clear on how the behavior is not By Josh Heck, Marketing Manager, Syndeo
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