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Home / AVOIDING COSTLY AND UNNECESSARY HIRING MISTAKES IN A DOWN ECONOMY

AVOIDING COSTLY AND UNNECESSARY HIRING MISTAKES IN A DOWN ECONOMY

David A. Torres of the Employer Support Services Group explores the importance of communication in the legal aspects of hiring, managing and terminating workers at a time when workforces are getting leaner and every worker becomes increasingly valuable.

Posted: October 5, 2009

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With layoffs, downsizing and stressed-out employees, it is more important than ever for employers to focus on the legal aspects of hiring, managing and terminating workers.

A recent seminar sponsored by Invensure Insurance Brokers (Irvine, CA) for HR managers, business owners and others responsible for hiring and monitoring new employees explored issues that should be on every employer's mind when it comes to hiring practices, tracking employee performance, use of an employee handbook and areas of litigation.

The message was quite simple: The hiring of new employees is an important step for any company. But the work doesn't stop there.

Singer-songwriter Stephen Stills once wrote, "Paranoia strikes deep. Into your life it will creep." Over 40 years later, nowhere has paranoia crept deeper than into the hiring habits of today's employers, who live in such fear that they may not be in compliance and become targets for litigation that they forget it's their business. That should be the number one priority.

This happens all the time. Instead of developing a process and a system to safeguard their company from lawsuits, they end up relinquishing control of their company by focusing more on potential pitfalls than making sure they have hired the right employee. And after that, it's often too late.

This happens for several reasons. First is the high litigation potential that exists in our culture; everyone is looking to sue someone. Second, the government wants to tell you how to run your business, or at least that's how it seems. On the surface, they tell you "this is how it's going to be." But they're never really telling you how to do it. That, as owners, you control. At some point, you have to say, "It's my business and I am in the best position to know what's best for it." That control, particularly when hiring new workers, is all about communication. It's what creates a healthy and safe working environment, while at the same time decreasing both the need for termination and filing Workers' Compensation claims.

For instance, employers make their first mistake when they hire a forklift driver and automatically assume (because it says on his resume) he drives a forklift that he knows everything about the job he is going to do. What he doesn't know is your company, because you never took the time to explain it. He doesn't know your product, he doesn't know the facility, he doesn't know your best clients, and he doesn't really know what's expected of him.
That's not all. He doesn't know (and the employer may not know, either) that he has been set up to fail due to lack of communication. And with 80 to 90 percent of workplace injuries occurring within three months on a new job, the employer has laid some dangerous groundwork for workers' compensation claims.

I once worked with a company with more than 400 employees. The owner made a point to spend 30 minutes on the floor with each new employee to make certain they understood everything they could about their new job and what was expected of them. As a result, there was a drop-off in terminations and job-related injuries.


Communication is also a key element when evaluating an employee's performance. Unfortunately, this procedure often takes on a bureaucratic quality in which evaluations are rigidly structured as formal reviews once a year or once every two years.

Evaluations should really be conducted as often as possible. The foreman or manager should take the initiative to sit with an employee whenever possible to say, "This is how you do the job correctly." It should be constructive criticism and it should be verbal, not just written.

Time after time, however, the foreman or manager lacks the resolve to confront employees about their performance, to let them know if they are doing a good job or need to show improvement in certain areas. Then, a year later, the unsuspecting employees are handed a negative review they fail to see coming and they are out the door. Suddenly, the company is missing a worker and faced with training a new one. What comes next is a lurking fear that the suddenly terminated worker may be seeking legal options. All of which could have been avoided through proper communication.

Toward the end of the seminar, someone in the back of the room raised a question. "How important is it to have an employee handbook?" A good question and one that had a very short answer: "Not very important at all." Needless to say, that quieted the room down a bit.

An employee handbook isn't as important as many companies think it is. At best, it's overrated. The real game is all about open communication, not pages in a book that will probably sit in a drawer. In fact, very often it's the employee handbook that causes trouble for the employer.

For example, California is an employment-at-will state, which means as an employer you can walk in tomorrow and fire anyone and never have to give a reason why. Yet companies will put things like this in a handbook: "If you're late one day you get a verbal warning, two days a written warning, and three days a termination notice."

You can see what's happening. By including these criteria in a handbook, "employment-at-will" is taken out of the mix. Such written terminology becomes "reasons" for termination. The employee now thinks there has to be a reason to be terminated, since it's all outlined in the employee handbook. This is dangerous water to be treading in because a handbook sets expectations that aren't really necessary.

What is necessary when looking to avoid costly employment mistakes in a down economy, where workforces are getting leaner and every worker becomes increasingly valuable, is very simple…just good communication.

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David A. Torres, JD, is a Senior Partner with the Advocacy Division of Employer Support Services Group, Inc., 9140 Haven Avenue, Suite 105, Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730, 909-948-9500 , www.employersupportgroup.com.

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