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Flexible working schemes
Summary:
- Parents of children up to and including the age of 16 (or a disabled child under 18)
and carers of adults have a right to request flexible working.
- This is increasingly being offered to a wider range of employees as a benefit.
- Flexible working can encompass a wide range of options including flexitime,
staggered hours, time off in lieu, job sharing, part-time working, term-time working,
home working and career breaks.
- There are a number of significant business advantages to this.
- Such schemes need to be properly thought out and considered prior to implementation
to ensure that they will be welcomed by employees whilst not compromising the
effective running of the business.
- Care has to be taken to avoid unlawful discrimination.
Introduction
Parents of children up to and including the age of 16 (or a disabled child under 18)
and carers of adults have a right to request flexible working. However, employers are
increasingly offering more flexible working practices in order to recruit and retain
employees and to enable them to achieve a better "work life" balance. This overview
considers the reasons such schemes are becoming more common and offers some practical
tips for employers when considering giving employees more flexibility in their working
patterns.
The statutory right to request flexible working
The right to request flexible working is outlined in full in our
legal overview. This applies to parents of a child aged 16 or under or a
disabled child under 18, or the carer of a dependant adult.
Background to the work-life balance debate
The debate over how employees manage to balance their working and home
lives is not just concerned with parents; other employees also have caring duties. One
in six people aged 16 or over care for a sick, disabled or elderly person (there are 6.8
million carers in the UK) and this is expected to increase to 22% within the next five
years. Other employees may have other commitments or interests whereby the ability
to work more flexibly would increase their job satisfaction and loyalty.
The traditional 9-5 working pattern is becoming less common. The Office of
National Statistics, which looks at changes in working patterns, says that patterns of
work are changing and there may no longer be a standard model. Only 9% of adults
are in a relationship whereby the man is the sole breadwinner in the family. There is
also a significant rise in the number of men working part-time. The government aims
to enable men to take a more active role in family life and future changes to
maternity leave will allow the father to take the second six months of
his partner's maternity leave if desired.
This is commonly referred to as "work-life balance" and initiatives taken by
employers to help employees manage their work-life balance to best meet their needs
and aspirations include the following:
- flexitime
- staggered hours
- time off in lieu
- compressed working hours
- shift swapping
- self-rostering
- annualised hours
- job sharing
- part-time working
- term-time working
- home working
- tele-working
- breaks from work, including unpaid sabbaticals, or career break schemes.
The most common of these are part-time work, job sharing and flexitime. Many of
these offer non-financial benefits which give the employee greater control of his/her life
and enable a more satisfactory lifestyle to be achieved.
The extent of flexible schemes
96% of private sector employers operate at least one flexible working policy and
a survey by ACAS found that the number of employers offering flexible working
almost doubled in the last six years. They looked at various different types of flexible
working and reported the percentage of employers now offering this as follows:
- switching from full-time to part-time working - 64%
- job sharing - 41%
- home working - 28%
- term-time working - 28%
- flexitime - 26%
Examples of large companies which report significant successes as a result of
their flexible working policies include British Telecom (who reported productivity gains
of £10M a year, recruitment and sickness absence savings of over £7M a
year and accommodation savings of over £40m); the RAC, who reported
productivity increases of 8% for flexible hours, and HSBC who reported a 300% increase
in women returning to work after maternity leave.
Part-time work and coming in late/leaving early are the most frequently requested
forms of flexible work. What is necessary to meet individual needs can vary
tremendously - it may just be a simple requirement for more flexibility on
starting/leaving times, provided that the work is done, or some unpaid leave in order to
cope with childcare responsibilities.
A report from PricewaterhouseCoopers, "Managing Tomorrow's People", found that
47% of more than 1150 UK professionals surveyed rated flexible working arrangements
as their most important benefit. Both men and women valued this equally highly - 41%
and 54% respectively ranking it as the most valuable.
The advantages of such schemes
The advantages of taking a more flexible approach are as follows:
- enhanced job satisfaction - 40% of SMEs believe the main benefit
of flexible working is increased staff satisfaction
- increased productivity - statistics prove that a happy
workforce is more productive
- better utilisation of workers - these arrangements are not always
just one-sided as flexibility can work both ways with work being done to meet the
demands of the job and time off being taken in quiet periods
- a less stressed workforce - workers can accommodate either family
commitments or other outside activities and therefore feel less stress as they are
not so torn between conflicting demands. 68% of employers surveyed by the CIPD
reported that the opportunity to work flexibly has had a positive effect on
employee attitudes and morale.
- financial benefit to employees - in some cases, adjustments to
working hours can result in the employees incurring reduced costs of travel,
childcare or domiciliary care and this is therefore an attractive benefit which costs
the employer nothing but is very valuable to the employee
- reduced turnover - people can fit demands of home life within their
working lives and are also noticeably more committed to staying with an employer
who facilitates this
- wider recruitment pool - flexible working is an overwhelming
attraction proving even more of a pull than money. In addition, flexible schemes
can attract a wider range of candidates who otherwise would be barred from
applying because of their other commitments.
- better timekeeping - if people can fit their working time around
outside commitments (eg the school run, rush hour traffic) their ability to arrive
"on time" may be enhanced and you will benefit from their presence, rather than
having to manage their absences/lateness
- lower costs for the employer - in some organisations, the
introduction of some form of flexitime system has actually decreased costs. Time
previously spent attending appointments, taking long lunch hours etc is now taken
in the employee's own time and is no longer working time. In addition, a "bank"
of worked hours can reduce overtime payments: overtime is worked to meet the
demands of the job but may not be automatically paid until, for example, the end
of each quarter and it may be that the employee prefers to take the time in lieu.
- reduced casual absenteeism - in some environments employees
take time off sick when they are not actually ill, in order to look after children,
deal with personal or family emergencies, catch up on domestic issues etc. If
employees can take this time off legitimately, they may well do so instead of
"pulling a sickie". Two-thirds of the organisations who offered flexible working
believed that this helped reduce absence, as do flexible annual leave and occasional
home working.
- accommodation savings - there can be savings as a result of
accommodation. BT claim that improving desk utilisation by replacing the
conventional one-desk-per-employee arrangement with fewer "hot desks" can
save £16,000 per year per employee who works at home.
- increased loyalty - because the employer has attempted to meet
the employee's needs, greater loyalty is usually assured
- retention of experience - older employers with particular experience
may be happy to work beyond retirement age but not on a full-time basis (note
that rules which previously prevented employees from drawing their occupational
pension while working for the same employer have been relaxed).
Pitfalls to avoid
Most schemes are extremely successful but this depends on careful planning and
agreement before implementation. Issues to consider include client/customer requirements;
the need to have sufficient cover during opening hours and breaks; problems of fairness
(if some departments can accommodate certain patterns and others can't); the timing of
routine meetings so that people aren't excluded; ensuring that there is sufficient
resource to meet business requirements. Also if you are recruiting job share partners,
do ensure that they not only respect each other, but that their working methods are
compatible.
Organisational culture is seen as the biggest barrier to successful integration of work
and family life and yet lies at the heart of the psychological contract
between employee and employer. Even where you have clear policies in place, employees
can be reluctant to take them up if they run counter to a dominant long-hours culture
(and research shows that their response is more frequently to leave and go elsewhere
rather than to raise the issue). So consider your culture and take steps to ensure that
work-life balance issues are seen to be more acceptable, let senior managers work
flexibly (as a good example), promote the policy, discourage activities and practices
which make flexible arrangements harder to uphold and ensure that role models are
visible.
How to introduce a scheme
The main factor to bear in mind when introducing any sort of change is
consultation . Ensure that what you are considering will be valued and
is workable, and consider having a trial period or extending your plan to a pilot group
first.
- employee survey - find out what your employees would
appreciate and value. If you impose the solution from above, the project may
have the opposite effect to the one intended. Flexible working is a cultural
shift for many organisations, showing greater trust in the employee. You
may be considering lessening the extent of supervision and aiming to give
your employees the ability to manage their own lives better, so don't impose
a ready made solution on them. Also, if you don't check, you may end up
offering flexibility which is not really valued but causes you considerable
difficulties in implementing so consider what is of value to the individual
and to you. Remember that it is personal flexibility that accommodates
personal needs that will build a strong, loyal workforce.
- manage expectations - don't make out that you will consider anything if,
in reality, your ability to offer flexibility is extremely limited because of
production requirements etc. Only ask for comments on the areas where
you may take action. And make it clear to employees that you value their
views but obviously can only accommodate changes which will benefit the
business (even if indirectly) as well as the individual. Feed back the results
of your research to your workers including a timescale which you will then
stick to to evaluate suggestions and make decisions.
- bear in mind the cultural shift - are your managers concerned about
how they will monitor performance if the rules are less rigid and they're
not actually present at all times to oversee? You may find that you are
moving away from an attendance-based culture to a results culture and
this will need managing.
- talk to managers and find out what is really required in terms of on-site
cover. In particular, IT support staff, administrative and reception staff tend
to be areas where the degree of individual flexibility may be limited. Analyse
the jobs to find out what is actually necessary. Consider the impact on
colleagues of any individual changes.
- consider your competitors. What are they doing? What problems have
they had? What benefits have they gained?
- consider the impact on clients and suppliers - many managers are worried
about the thought of employees not being there at core times in case a
client rings. Provided there is sufficient cover, to what extent does this
really matter? It may be easier to provide a better service to clients (ie you
retain valued staff even if during shorter hours, and staggered working hours
may mean that you can offer wider access opportunities to clients).
- consider health and safety implications such as longer opening
hours in the office, people working alone, security provisions, risk assessments for
home workers etc.
- consider routine meetings and timings etc to ensure that all workers can be
present together when necessary and that they remain well-informed and
involved.
- if considering home working, decide on what level of staff, how much work
may be done at home, with whose permission and bear in mind
health and safety
considerations. Also look at the technology
required to enable this. And if you intend to spread the scope of home working
widely (rather than just allowing this on an occasional basis to meet deadlines,
complete confidential projects or reports etc) then consider your working practices
and security issues - are files accessible, do you have sufficient data security etc.
- discuss what may be a reasonable compromise.
- change contracts
- you may wish to ensure that you
have the right to return to previous working practices if the new schemes
don't work satisfactorily.
- decide how you will monitor the effectiveness of the scheme and consider
having a trial period. Is productivity up? Is turnover down? Are your employees
happier?
- feed back your decision to your employees and agree a suitable start
date. Make sure that there is an open door to discuss and resolve any
problems which arise as you go.
Legal considerations
Just a few legal points to bear in mind:
- Women who are refused flexible work could bring a
sex discrimination
claim so take care to consider any requests fully.
- A disability
claim can be made if any employer fails to make
a reasonable adjustment by refusing a request from a disabled employee (or by
association, someone who cares for a disabled person) for flexible work.
- Workers with particular religious or other beliefs
may claim
discrimination if an employer refuses a reasonable request for flexible work in
order to permit religious observance.
- Part-timers
must not receive less favourable treatment
than full-timers.
- Changes to working hours must still comply with the minimum breaks
set out in the working time regulations
.
Further advice
Business Link has some
case studies
describing successful flexible working initiatives.
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