Chp. 2.6 Employer and Employee Relations HL
Chp. 2.6 Employer and Employee Relations HL
Chp. 2.6 Employer and Employee Relations HL
MANAGEMENT
Elements of a Healthy Employer-Employee Relationship
Collective Bargaining
In a work-to-rule action, employees work at the minimum level required by their contract.
In an overtime ban, employees are instructed by their union to refuse to work beyond
their contracted hours.
Strike action means that employees refuse to work. This is usually the result of major
disagreements within large organizations over pay, benefits and working conditions.
SOURCES OF CONFLICT
Change - this can be driven by either internal or external factors.
Different interests - workers, who in certain respects have a
lesser stake in business than managers or the shareholders, focus on
their individual goals, which may include more flexibility in the workplace
or higher wages.
Different values - individuals see the world differently. Lack of
acceptance and understanding of these differences can cause conflict.
External factors - any number of external factors can disrupt the
workplace: changes in STEEPLE.
Insufficient resources - no organization has unlimited resources.
Poor communication - sometimes managers and workers
clash because lack of communication has created misunderstanding.
Poor performance - sometimes people do not do their jobs properly.
APPROACHES TO
CONFLICT
RESOLUTION
Conflict resolution involves
actions taken to reduce
tensions and manage conflict in
the work environment. Some
approaches to conflict
resolution include:
Conciliation and arbitration
Employee participation and
industrial democracy
No-strike agreement
Single union agreement
CONCILIATION AND ARBITRATION
Discomfort of employees are often happy with the current situation and want to
maintain the status quo.
Fear - changes often makes employees afraid simply because they do not
know what will happen.
Lack of job skills - employees may not have the skills necessary to perform in
the changed work environment.
Loss of control - when managers insist on change, employees feel that they do
not have control over their lives.
REASONS FOR RESISTANCE TO CHANCE
Poor communication - employees do not know why the business needs to change.
Poor timing - change is brought about for the needs of the organization but might occur at a time
that, for either professional or personal reasons, may fit poorly with the needs of employees.
Prior experience - an employee may have had a bad experience with change in an
another organization or at an earlier time with his or her current employer.
Social support - an employee who works with a group of people who resist change may choose to
resist for the sake of maintaining social relationships.
HR STRATEGIES
TO REDUCE THE
IMPACT OF
CHANGE
Develop a vision for the change process and the desired outcomes. If necessary,
the business may have to realign its largest aims and vision for the organization.
HR STRATEGIES Involve employees in the change process from the outset so that employees are
not surprised and so that they do not feel powerless.
TO REDUCE THE
Regularly communicate to all appropriate stakeholders how the change process
IMPACT OF is unfolding.
CHANGE Train employees in advance of those changes that affect them directly, which
should allow them to see the benefits of change immediately.
Be aware of the stress that change can cause and support employees as much as
possible, before, during, and after change.