Inducting new employees - Granville Ecopark Limited
In this guide:
- Job offers and staff inductions
- Deciding on your successful job candidate
- Making a job offer to the successful candidate
- Advantages of job inductions
- Preparing for an induction
- Induction programme: what to include
- New starter pack for staff
- Tailoring the induction to the worker
- Inducting new employees - Granville Ecopark Limited
Deciding on your successful job candidate
Selecting the most suitable candidate for a job and contacting unsuccessful applicants.
After you have completed the assessment stage, eg, the interviews and tests, you should make your final selection decision as soon as possible.
To help you reach that decision, you should take notes during the interview as questions are being answered. This will ensure that what is said is reflected as accurately as possible.
Immediately after the interview, you should then finalise your notes and other relevant details.
This is useful for both decision-making and providing feedback to the candidates if requested. Bear in mind that shortlisted candidates may request access to their interview notes or any other documentation related to the recruitment process as part of any legal process.
Making fair recruitment decisions
To make the decision-making process fair and avoid any potentially unlawful discrimination you should choose the candidate that most closely meets your selection criteria.
To do this:
- Use a structured scoring system, rating candidates against your selection criteria. This allows you to compare a candidate's score with your ideal score.
- If you use a less formal system for comparing candidates, you must try to make your assessments on an equal basis.
- Try making an assessment sheet showing the reasons for making offers, putting candidates on hold, or rejecting them. Your reasons should relate to your selection criteria, interview questions, and, if applicable, the results of other tests or assessments.
Once you've made your choice, you need to make the successful candidate a job offer. See making a job offer to the successful candidate.
Decide on second and third choices, if possible, in case your first choice turns down the position.
In addition, a reserve list could be compiled, giving you greater flexibility to make further appointments in the event that similar future vacancies arise during a defined period (eg, six months). Reference to a reserve list being compiled would need to be made in the advertisement.
Dealing with unsuccessful applicants
You should let all unsuccessful applicants, whether shortlisted for assessment or not, know of your decision not to employ them as soon as possible.
If you are delayed in making your decision, eg, because you are waiting for your first choice to respond, let them know of the delay by phone, email, or letter.
Be prepared to give feedback to unsuccessful candidates. They might want to know their relative strengths and also where they might do better next time.
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Making a job offer to the successful candidate
Unconditional job offers and what to do if the offer is subject to the candidate meeting certain conditions.
Once you've chosen who you'd like to employ, you may wish to make them a job offer by telephone. This can help you quickly establish if the individual wants to accept the post.
If that is the case, you can go on to discuss any terms of employment that need to be agreed upon - eg their salary, wages, and benefits.
Job offer letters
If your chosen candidate accepts your offer of employment verbally, you should then send them a formal job offer letter including:
- their name
- their job title
- the terms on which the job is offered
- the date agreed that their employment will start
- whether they will have a probationary period
- any conditions, eg, checks on eligibility to work in the UK and take up the employment in question
- evidence of any qualifications required for the role
- details of any action required by the candidate to meet those conditions, eg, production of suitable evidence proving that they have the right to work in the UK
You should bear in mind that an offer letter can form part of an employee's employment contract. You must therefore ensure that the terms and conditions outlined in the offer letter are correct, as these can be contractually enforceable.
Sample letter of a job offer to the successful candidate (DOC, 12K).
Written statement of employment
You must also give new employees a written statement of their main terms and conditions of employment within two months of the starting date if they are going to be working with you for a period of one month or more.
For further information, see the employment contract.
Ask the candidate to send you a signed copy of the offer letter - this establishes the terms on which the offer was made, in case of any disputes.
Note that if the job offer is unconditional and the candidate accepts it, a contract of employment exists between you and them.
This means that they may benefit from certain employment-protection rights, eg, a claim of discrimination, even if they haven't actually started working for you.
However, you should note that the right to claim discrimination applies even if no job offer has been made.
Making conditional offers of employment
Offers can be subject to candidates meeting certain conditions based on your pre-employment checks, such as:
- a criminal records check (CRC) via AccessNI
- a medical examination - if relevant, this must apply to all prospective workers, not just those with a disability
- providing suitable references - you should be aware that the referees may refuse to provide a reference or may wrongly indicate an applicant's suitability
- providing proof that they have the right to be and work in the UK - read more on ensuring your workers are eligible to work in the UK and use this interactive tool to check if your workers are eligible to work in the UK
Employment offers can also be made subject to the successful completion of a probationary period.
You will need to carry out the necessary checks as soon as possible and before the employment starts - most prospective workers won't wish to hand in their notice until they have had an unconditional offer of employment from you.
Assuming your first choice candidate meets all the conditions, you should send them another - unconditional - offer letter. If they can't meet the conditions, you can withdraw your offer and turn to your second-choice candidate if you have one.
Avoiding unlawful discrimination when making offers of employment
You should ensure that no one is discouraged or excluded from accepting a job because of, for example, their gender, gender reassignment, marital or civil partnership status, religious belief or political opinion, disability, sexual orientation, race, pregnancy, ethnicity, or age.
If you are found to be operating discriminatory recruitment practices, an unsuccessful job applicant may be able to bring an unlawful discrimination claim to an industrial tribunal or fair employment tribunal - even if you were unaware of such practices.
If their claim is successful, there is no cap on the amount of compensation that the tribunal can award.
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Advantages of job inductions
Job induction training can help maximise motivation and understanding of the work for a new employee.
Once your chosen candidate has accepted an unconditional offer of employment, you need to start planning their job induction training.
What is a job induction?
Job induction is the formal process of welcoming an employee to an organisation. Job induction usually involves highlighting the purpose, goals, and values of the organisation. You might also explain the function of various teams or departments within your organisation through the job induction process. The induction offers a good opportunity to identify any training that the new candidate may need to help them perform their role.
Advantages of carrying out an induction
You should carry out induction training as it will help benefit new staff by helping them to:
- establish themselves quickly in their job and therefore maximise their productivity
- become motivated to do well and fit into the business early on
- understand any health and safety issues relating to their job - this will not only help to reduce accidents at work but also help you ensure that you are meeting your duty of care obligations under the health and safety legislation
- understand your business culture
Why is a job induction important?
Investing time to induct new employees will give new workers a good grounding and help them make fewer mistakes in the long run. The highest level of staff turnover is among newer workers, so it is important that the early period spent with your business leaves a good impression on them.
You should also consider carrying out a basic induction for workers who are changing jobs within the business. For those workers returning after a long absence, eg maternity leave or a period of illness, a welcome back meeting would be beneficial. See tailoring the induction to the worker and our induction templates:
For more information on job inductions download the recruiting new employees section from the Employers' Handbook (PDF, 170K).
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Preparing for an induction
Prepare induction checklists, inform key workers, and ensure newcomers feel welcome.
Preparation is the key to a good staff induction.
Before the worker starts
- Tell other people that there's a new starter, prepare their working area, organise any equipment necessary, and have any documentation ready for them to read.
- Consider providing them with an information pack about the job before they begin work - see new starter pack for staff.
- Prepare an induction checklist including all the items that need to be covered and what needs to be done, and when. You can plan for the induction to be spread over a period of days or weeks depending on the nature of the job.
- Make sure that the key people who will be involved in the induction process have been briefed.
- Arrange in advance any instruction or training courses needed, eg, on your IT systems.
Once the worker starts
- Ensure that when the new recruit arrives, they are made to feel welcome.
- Get one person, ideally, their line manager, to take care of a new starter throughout the first day.
- Make sure they know how any office machinery works, and the location of commonly used facilities, eg, the post room, stationery store, and lavatories.
- It is a good idea to get new workers to complete some kind of work on their first day. This can help them relate what they are learning to their job.
- Include informal aspects such as whether the tea, coffee, and biscuits are free or whether there is a kitty.
- Ask for feedback during and after the process to check that you haven't missed anything. You might want to give the new starter a checklist and ask them to sign it to show it has been completed.
- It could be beneficial to provide a mentor for the new employee - this would likely be another member of staff who works within their team and is familiar with the type of work they will be doing.
Once you have established a good induction procedure, it is useful to set it out in writing and use it whenever a new person starts.
Induction templates
To help you devise your staff induction activities, download and use our sample induction plans:
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Induction programme: what to include
Sort out bank details and health and safety information, confirm terms and conditions, and introduce staff.
You should provide information to a new worker at a rate that allows them to understand it properly. Explain what the business does and how they and their role fits in.
You may like to arrange an employee induction programme to include sessions with different members of staff so they can explain their role and their teams' role in relation to the business activities. There are a number of business areas you could cover through your induction programme, which we have outlined below.
Employee induction on administration
You may need to provide the new worker with:
- details of any occupational pension scheme
- a copy of any procedures and employee handbooks
- any uniforms and standard equipment they will need to perform their job role
Induction: terms and conditions of employment
It is a legal requirement for employers to give their employees a written statement of terms and conditions of employment within two months of starting work, except for those employees who will be working for less than one month.
It is a good idea to go through this with the new worker during the induction programme and give them details of issues such as:
- hours of work - including breaks
- sickness and holiday procedures
- disciplinary and grievance procedures
Induction: health and safety
You are legally required to provide workers with any health and safety information they need to carry out their job safely. Provide them with a copy of the business's health and safety policy and get them to sign it once they have read it. What should be in your health and safety policy?
You must inform new workers, preferably on the first day, of fire safety procedures and what to do if the fire alarm sounds. If there are particular hazards, eg, in a factory or on a building site, you must ensure that new workers are made aware of them and what precautions need to be taken.
New to the job - staying safe at work.
It is a good idea to show the new workers where they:
- may smoke outside your premises - if at all
- can read your drugs and alcohol policy
For more information, see workplace policies on smoking, drugs and alcohol.
If their job involves the use or operation of machinery, you must ensure that they are properly trained, that they understand any associated risks, and that they have appropriate safety equipment. Make sure the worker knows how to operate any equipment they will be using and show them where spares, replacements, and other materials they may need are kept.
Tour of the business premises as part of the induction
Show new workers where they will be working and the location of any facilities they will need to access.
Introduction to colleagues during induction
Introduce new workers to their team colleagues in turn, and to:
- their line manager
- those responsible for human resources, training and/or IT support
- the health and safety officer
- trade union or employee representatives
Introduction to the job
You should take them through what their job entails and how this fits in with the rest of the business. It may be a good idea to buddy them with an established member of staff who can show them how to perform certain work-related tasks. You may also find that regular catch-up meetings with the new staff member in the early stages of their employment will help you maintain their progression and address any problems or concerns they may have before they become a major issue.
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New starter pack for staff
What a new starter pack should contain, including documents such as a staff handbook or organisational chart.
It may be useful to put together a new starter pack of information which can be given to new staff. New starter packs could be either sent when they have accepted the job or given to the worker on the day they begin work.
What should a new starter pack contain?
A new starter pack could contain information about the organisation, employment documents, and facilities such as:
- a letter welcoming them to the organisation
- the latest annual report
- introductory information about the business, including a brochure or other marketing materials, your strategic narrative, any sports or social clubs, or any other workplace benefits
- an organisational chart
- the latest staff newsletter
- health and safety arrangements
- their terms and conditions of employment
- a copy of the staff handbook
- specific information about their role, including their job description, an organisation chart, and any material about the team they will join
- any other policies, rules, or procedures that apply to your business
- a diagram setting out the location of photocopiers, meeting rooms, eating facilities, lavatories, and fire exits
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Tailoring the induction to the worker
Alter your induction programme to suit the needs of different sorts of workers.
The majority of new staff will need a similar type of induction. However, some starters may need a programme that is tailored to take into account their special circumstances.
For instance, if you employ young people who are new to the workplace, you must ensure that they receive adequate information regarding health and safety in the workplace, as they may be unaware of the risks it presents.
Returning employees
For people returning to your employment after a long period away, you should make them aware of major new developments in the workplace, eg, reorganisations. If you have introduced new ways of working since they last worked for you, they may need additional training. If staff need to acquire updated knowledge, identify it fully and agree to an updated training programme with them. This will maximise involvement and commitment. See develop a staff training plan.
Directors will need to know more about the finances, strategy, and development objectives of the business than other workers. Read more on recruiting directors.
Workers with disabilities may have special needs in terms of access, using equipment, and communicating with colleagues. As such, you may be legally obliged to make reasonable adjustments to your premises and/or the worker's job. Employers will need to ensure that any induction process has been adjusted in order to accommodate any new starters with a disability. Read more on support if you employ someone who is disabled.
When planning an induction, you may also wish to take into account those whose first language is not English.
You should also be sensitive to cultural or religious customs and make sure your induction process is not discriminatory.
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Job offers and staff inductions
Inducting new employees - Granville Ecopark Limited
How the Dungannon-based business welcomes new staff through induction and training programmes.
Granville EcoPark is an enhanced anaerobic digestion facility that processes food waste to create renewable energy. The business based in Dungannon, County Tyrone, employs 33 people.
Pauline McCrory, HR and Marketing Manager, explains how Granville EcoPark welcomes and supports new staff through a range of steps, including a two-week induction with job shadowing, bespoke training and an assessment programme.
Our challenge
"With a small workforce of 33 staff, the company employs individuals with a diverse range of skills that are essential to the operation of a successful anaerobic digestion business."
"Our business is unique, so it can be a challenge to hire employees with the specific skills and experience required for our type of business operation. When we find the right staff, we recognise the importance of retaining them by welcoming them into the organisation and quickly identifying any training that is needed to help them perform their role."
"The first two weeks in a job are a crucial time for all new employees. This is when there is traditionally the highest level of staff turnover. We work to ensure that this early period is spent helping employees feel established via a structured programme of training and support."
"In the past, we had a less formal emphasis on staff induction. This relaxed 'hit the ground running' approach resulted in low retention rates of 58% and poor organisational culture."
How did we meet these challenges?
"We took active steps to improve our retention rates and boost employee morale at the staff induction phase. We developed a tailored two-week induction timetable. This schedule uses a mix of training methods and aims to ensure that new employees establish themselves quickly and feel motivated to do well. During this induction period, the new recruit learns about company values, policies and procedures. We accompany this with job shadowing."
"Each new recruit is assigned an induction buddy, who will take the employee through the job role and shadow the experienced team member. Induction buddies aim to demonstrate our business values and help new staff understand what the company does and why we do it, as well as being a section within the induction. We have found this job shadowing system an excellent method of building a rapport between new staff and their future teammates."
"Every new operational employee will also receive ground-up training in the engineering and scientific process required for them to fulfil their job role. This bespoke training is followed by an assessment at the end of a six-month probationary period."
Bespoke training and assessment programme
"The bespoke training programmes and assessments have been designed in-house by management team members. Our approach is to confirm understanding at every stage. All new operators receive a workbook folder at their three-month progress review. They have a further three months to complete it while working on the job and during this time, they are encouraged to ask anyone in the team for help in finding the answers."
"At the end of the six-month probationary period, each new operator will have an assessment of their development. We evaluate whether they meet the necessary standards through their workbooks and verbal exams. The verbal exams assess the individual's confidence and knowledge in each area. If a new operator passes these steps, they will be promoted to a position as a plant operator and receive a pay rise to reflect this."
"If a recruit fails to qualify for the next stage, they receive a two-month extension to develop their skills and re-take the assessment. We have found that this approach leads to an 80% pass rate for new employees. Our assessments are designed so that only the most suitable individuals will progress, which reflects the demanding and challenging job role that they are undertaking."
The benefits
"Our revised approach to staff induction through job shadowing and formal training combined with assessment has delivered benefits to both new staff and Granville EcoPark. These improvements range from reducing employee turnover through to increasing operational efficiency and boosting staff morale and organisational communication at all levels."
"Within eight months of implementing these changes alongside the creation of company committees and wellbeing programmes, the average staff retention rate has risen to 93%, an impressive increase of 60% in a short time."
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Using staff benefits to motivate and retain staff - Outsource Solutions
In this guide:
Advantages of staff perks and incentives
Benefits of offering effective staff incentive schemes and perks for employers and employees.
Employers can use perks and incentives to motivate their staff and encourage positive behaviours from workers that contribute to the success of their business.
There are various types of incentives, perks, and rewards that businesses can introduce to the workplace. You could introduce recognition incentives that thank staff for doing a great job, eg, employee of the month or achievement certificates. You could also offer reward incentives, which usually present staff with an item of value that demonstrates your acknowledgement of the job they are doing and is often rewarded once certain targets or goals have been achieved or exceeded.
Staff perks: business benefits
An effective system of staff incentives and perks brought together in an attractive employment package could help your business:
- attract new staff to join your business
- retain existing staff
- increase staff motivation, morale, and loyalty
- boost productivity
- demonstrate your gratitude for a job well done
- link individual and business performance
- focus employees on achieving targets and goals
- encourage and build effective teamwork - see how to build and manage an effective team
Introducing perks or staff incentives to your workplace does not have to cost a lot of money. Some very effective perks cost very little, eg, a staff discount on products or services your business sells or flexible working options for staff.
Some incentives and perks may benefit your business indirectly, eg, free health assessments may reduce staff absence and sickness.
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Staff incentive schemes: the options
Weigh up your options for introducing staff incentive schemes in your workplace.
There is a wide range of staff incentive schemes, each with different costs and appeal. They include financial and non-financial schemes, individual and group benefits, and short-term and long-term schemes.
Options for staff incentive schemes
Financial incentives in the workplace can help your business meet targets, motivate staff, and improve performance and productivity.
Financial incentives
Examples of financial incentives include:
- bonuses
- commission
- employee stock options
- paid time off
Non-financial incentives
Non-financial and non-pay incentives reward staff performance through perks and opportunities. Non-financial incentives include:
- flexible working hours
- formal recognition/awards
- vouchers
- extra unpaid leave
- gifts
- company cars
- training opportunities
- further education opportunities
An incentive scheme can offer employees extra pay as long as they reach individual or group performance targets. See performance-related pay.
Advantages and disadvantages of incentive schemes
Type Advantages Disadvantages Financial incentive Can focus employees on hitting a target. Places a value on achievement.
Rewards are sometimes small. Can demoralise if not earned.
Non-financial incentive Can recognise employee priorities and lifestyles. Can encourage attachment to business.
Can be taken for granted. May be inappropriate.
Individual incentive Can focus the individual on achievement. Links extra pay with extra output.
Can be divisive. Individual earnings can fluctuate.
Group incentive Can encourage teamwork. Can correct individual under-performance.
Can undervalue individual skills. May encourage bullying of under-performers.
Some businesses allow staff to select their own benefits from a pre-defined list, eg, staff might be able to choose between health insurance and a gym membership.Promotion and training opportunities are not strictly incentives as they are ways of fulfilling business needs. However offering employees the opportunity to access training or further education courses that aren't directly related to the person's job role with some or all of the costs met by the organisation, can work as a staff incentive.
Ensure your business avoids using negative incentives, eg, threat of dismissal. These may work in the short term, but may create a toxic workplace culture and can decrease morale and loyalty.
Tax considerations for staff incentives
There are tax and National Insurance implications for most financial incentives and for non-financial benefits with an equivalent cash value - see employee incentive awards.
Other considerations
When offering any incentives in your workplace, ensure equality and avoid discrimination by enabling all staff the opportunity to access all available incentive schemes.
In addition, you are required to treat married employees and those in civil partnerships in the same way. For example, if you have a benefits package that is available to an employee's spouse, it should also be available to an employee's civil partner.
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Staff perks: the options
How staff perks enhance the quality of working life and encourage employee loyalty.
Staff perks are generally a good method of attracting new talent and retaining employees as they are not related to productivity. Perks can encourage staff affiliation and loyalty to the organisation.
Staff perks options
There is a wide range of perks that employers can introduce to the workplace, including:
- occupational pensions
- more holidays than the statutory minimum - see know how much holiday to give your staff
- gifts, eg, on birthdays or at Christmas
- health benefits, eg, health insurance/assessments
- flexible working - see flexible working: the law and best practice
- subsidised staff canteens, tea/coffee-making facilities, or goods/services
- loans, eg, season tickets
- social events, eg, Christmas parties and work outings
- membership of social clubs or gyms
- extra training, which goes beyond the skills needed for the job
Perks: some considerations
You may want to consider the following points when providing staff perks:
- they must be perceived as worthwhile
- they must not cost the employer more to provide than the employee could get them for
- they must be worth more to the employee than any tax they will pay on them
Make sure that the perks you choose are relevant to both your business and staff.
Be careful when removing or changing any of the perks you offer. If they are part of your employees' contracts, you will need to gain their consent prior to changing any conditions or removing them. If you do not get consent, the employee may be entitled to sue for breach of contract or resign and claim constructive dismissal. See how to change an employee's terms of employment.
Tax considerations for staff perks
Most perks with an equivalent cash value have tax implications - see expenses and benefits.
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Set up a staff incentive scheme
Steps employers can take to set up staff perks and incentive schemes.
Remember that pay and financial benefits are not the only things that may improve staff performance and drive productivity.
Other key motivators for employees include:
- job security
- job satisfaction
- good working conditions
- appropriate training
Setting up an incentive scheme: steps to take
An incentive scheme is perhaps the most straightforward way to motivate staff. If you are considering setting up a staff incentive scheme, you should:
Identify the incentive scheme's objectives
For example, encouraging the recruitment or retention of staff, changing the organisational structure of the workplace, or reducing any likely areas of conflict. Alternatively, you might want to encourage teamwork and motivation or to set specific targets for productivity, revenue, or sales.
Consult with staff and trade unions
This will help you identify where to aim the incentives, eg, at your entire workforce, managers, or a specific group of employees. It will help you find out what incentives your staff value most and what training they need to help them achieve a business target. See work effectively with trade unions and employee engagement.
Relate the incentive scheme to the business's remuneration system
Consider whether the incentive should be financial or non-financial. Think about how the proposed incentive will relate to other cash benefits and how much administration will be needed.
Establish any tax implications for your staff
Consider related costs and funding. See expenses and benefits, and special types of employee pay.
Ensure that the planned incentive scheme is competitive
Look at similar incentive schemes within other businesses.
Decide on performance measures for your staff
You might set targets for performance levels or work quality. See manage staff performance.
Run a pilot incentive scheme and evaluate results
See ensuring the staff incentive scheme is successful.
Regularly review your incentive scheme and obtain feedback from staff
Make sure that you document, communicate, and obtain feedback from staff to gain an understanding of what works and what doesn't work. See encourage staff feedback and ideas.
You can also consider commercial providers of benefits packages who, for a fee, can manage the staff incentive scheme for you.
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Ensuring the staff incentive scheme is successful
How to evaluate your staff incentive scheme and ensure it works effectively.
Staff incentives and perks must be affordable, transparent, and appropriate to your business and the jobs they link to. For example, in a sales environment, an employer may wish to offer extra pay or benefits when sales targets are achieved.
It is also worth consulting with staff or unions before introducing incentives and perks to your workforce.
Staff incentives and perks work best alongside good pay schemes and working conditions, and can be most successful when implemented with other good management practices, such as performance management, appraisal, and appropriate communication and staff training programmes. See manage staff performance.
Establishing the staff incentive scheme
You can take measures when setting up a staff incentive scheme to help ensure its success. These include:
- briefing the workforce on the incentive scheme and how it will work and benefit them
- training supervisors to answer employee or trade union queries on the incentive scheme
- documenting how the incentive scheme will work to avoid misunderstandings
- running a pilot incentive scheme to see if any adjustments should be made before rolling it out fully
Is the staff incentive scheme working?
Establish a system that keeps a record of objectives and goals that you would like the staff incentive scheme to achieve. Remember that some incentives/perks can indirectly benefit the business, and so it may be difficult to assess their impact.
Review the staff incentives and find out through feedback whether staff value them.
Your incentives should be open to all and must not discriminate against certain staff, eg, membership of a men-only golf club. See prevent discrimination and value diversity.
Evaluating the staff incentive scheme
Set a time for evaluating the incentive scheme and involve staff or union representatives if appropriate.
Your evaluation process should aim to find out:
- whether the staff incentive scheme is achieving its objectives
- whether the staff incentive scheme is fair in terms of who benefits
- whether incentives linked to performance really do motivate staff
- how the incentive scheme is promoted and how well staff understand and buy into it
- whether staff require further information or training to help them achieve their performance targets
- how the incentive scheme compares with those of competitors or industry norms
Monitoring your staff incentive scheme or schemes is an ongoing process - problem areas should be highlighted and promptly addressed as they arise.
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Implement staff incentive schemes
Using staff benefits to motivate and retain staff - Outsource Solutions
How Outsource Solutions engages with its staff and has introduced a variety of benefits to help attract new employees.
Outsource Solutions is an IT managed services provider offering IT, communications, and consultancy services. The company is based across various locations in Northern Ireland, including Antrim, Belfast, and Cookstown, and also has offices in Dublin and Scotland.
Sara Allen, Head of Communication and Culture, explains how the company engages with employees and, through incentives and benefits, retains and attracts staff.
Our approach
"The organisation is committed to creating and maintaining a company culture that values staff and actively listens to them. Our regular team days, random treats, and ongoing celebrations, when we want to mark a moment of success, are a small part of this ethos. Outsource staff also have access to benefits including flexible working, health schemes, medical insurance, and a bonus day off on their birthday. We believe that our approach and some of these benefits help to contribute to increased staff engagement and employee retention."
Promoting a healthy work-life balance
"The importance of work-life balance is recognised by Outsource, so flexible and remote working is open to all staff. The only exception to remote working within the company is for our telephone support team, where staff need to have a physical presence in the office for a set period. In this instance, that team benefits by personally managing their rota so that support cover is always available, but individuals also get to enjoy regular time off on a rotational basis."
Offering a birthday day off
"Another benefit we offer is that staff employed for a year qualify for an extra annual day off on their birthday. If this day falls on a weekend, the employee can choose to take either the Friday or Monday as leave. Staff with birthdays that fall during a public holiday, such as Christmas, can take an alternative day. This approach works positively to boost staff morale, as employees get to enjoy an extra day off. From a company perspective, staff birthdays fall relatively evenly across the year, so absences never affect operational function on any one single day."
Focusing on health and wellbeing
"Staff health and wellbeing is an important focus within the organisation. A financial benefit we provide to staff is automatic enrolment in free healthcare when they have been with the company for a qualifying period. These employees get access to dental care, private medical care, counselling sessions, and a discounted family membership.
"We support health and wellbeing events organised by staff throughout the year. We also have Vitality Champions, who we recognise and celebrate for their individual health or fitness achievements - this could include a team member who quit smoking and took up running."
Offering surprise treats
"Staff incentives don't have to be expensive. We have had a positive response to surprising staff with random treats. These can be to celebrate success, boost morale, or even just because it's Friday! We have had everything from speciality doughnuts, pastries for morning coffee, or an ice-cream van arriving at the offices on a sunny afternoon. These small gestures frequently bring a smile to faces and make staff feel appreciated."
Asking staff for their opinions
"Outsource places importance on listening to staff. We value feedback from every member of the team. The company actively makes and creates space for staff to be heard. We have impromptu team huddles - these gather staff together to provide feedback on ideas. These sessions aim to allow equal opportunity for staff to share their views and opinions."
"Another way that we engage with staff is through our employee forum. The employee forum aims to achieve two-way communication between staff and management. The group meets on a quarterly basis and assembles staff from various site locations and different teams to voice concerns and table ideas for improvement. Ideas often range from suggestions for enhancing organisational processes to improving site facilities. Engaging with staff is important, but we believe that it must be balanced with implementing positive suggestions for change and delivering on any promises made."
"Other ways that Outsource makes and creates space for staff to be heard are through management open-door policies and regular staff surveys. We believe that our approach and the benefits help to contribute to increased staff engagement and employee retention We are a growing team, our motto, 'work with us not for us' is certainly bought into by our staff who give us regular positive feedback confirming they feel valued, trusted and happy to come to work."
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Five top tips to increase employee engagement
Advantages of employee engagement
By effectively engaging your staff, you will motivate them to contribute to the success of your business.
Employee engagement is a workplace approach designed to ensure that employees are committed to your business goals and values. By engaging them in your business, you'll give them a vested interest in your organisation and will give them the incentive to contribute to the success of the business. At the same time, engagement will improve their sense of worth and wellbeing.
Business benefits of engaged employees
Employee engagement benefits everyone involved with your business by creating an informed, involved, and productive workplace that helps propel your business towards its goals.
When implemented properly, employee engagement can bring the following business benefits:
Higher staff commitment
Fully engaged staff feel valued and have an increased desire and commitment to give their best to their organisation.
Stronger teams
Employee engagement benefits teams as well as individual employees. As engaged individuals perform at a higher level, this naturally leads to stronger teams that are better equipped to handle difficult situations should they arise.
Shared objectives
By engaging your employees, you are more likely to have staff who are aligned with organisational goals, regardless of the team they work in. This is a win-win situation as teams that work towards common goals feel more engaged, and engaged employees are more motivated to work towards shared objectives.
Lower absenteeism
Engaged staff are less likely to experience high levels of stress and are more likely to be happier in the workplace. There is also less chance of burnout as employees who are engaged will feel supported to raise issues sooner, and you, as a manager, will also have a better gauge of how staff are feeling, helping you to spot warning signs before they escalate. This contributes to lower rates of sickness or absenteeism.
Adherence to business values
Engaged employees are more likely to behave in ways that support your business values.
Staff retention
You are more likely to retain staff who are engaged and feel fully involved in the organisation. When staff see how they contribute to the performance of the business, they are much more likely to be motivated and invested in the success of the business. You'll also be able to find out what help and support staff need to progress in their careers.
Attract new talent
An engaged workforce can help set you apart from the competition in the job market. You will be seen as the employer of choice as potential recruits will see that you value your staff. You'll be able to attract recruits from a diverse talent pool. Employees are likely to act as advocates for your business by voicing why they enjoy working for your organisation.
Feedback that can lead to improvement
The establishment of a culture that enables staff to voice their opinions can lead to better ways to do things and improvement, and efficiency in business practices.
Empower your staff
Engaged employees feel empowered and that their opinions and feedback matter to the future direction of the business. This also gives them responsibility for their actions, providing the opportunity to achieve key skills for their development.
Increase in innovation
Staff who are fully engaged are more likely to have the motivation to seek innovative solutions to problems or generate new, innovative ideas or products.
Better customer service
Staff who are engaged and believe in the organisation they work for will have a better focus on improved customer service.
Increased productivity
Engaged employees are more efficient and produce higher-quality work because they're personally invested in their job, so it matters to them to perform at a high level and therefore increase productivity across your workforce.
Increased revenue
Engaged staff are likely to be more productive and innovative, leading to increased sales and revenue for your business.
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How to encourage employee engagement in your business
How to develop an employee engagement strategy that delivers productive staff and positive results for your business.
Employee engagement is about creating a shift in the organisational culture that establishes an environment that encourages effective staff participation and involvement right across your organisation.
Five Cs of employee engagement
Many experts suggest following the 5 Cs strategy to effectively encourage staff engagement.
Care
Employers and managers must show that they care for their staff. You can do this by ensuring employees have the support and tools they need to do their job. You should also encourage a healthy work-life balance amongst your staff, showing that their health and wellbeing are just as important to you as it is to them.
The more you engage with your employees, the more you'll understand their individual needs and characteristics. You can then tailor the support and benefits you offer to meet these needs and create a more engaged workforce. Examples of caring can include offering flexible working arrangements and promoting workplace health and wellbeing initiatives.
Connect
Building strong relationships across your organisation can be very powerful. To do this, you should encourage open communication and provide opportunities for employees at all levels to interact and collaborate. You can also utilise various initiatives and tools to help facilitate connections in the workplace eg mindfulness workshops, virtual chat groups, and social events so employees can get to know one another beyond just a professional level.
You could also give staff ownership of their connections by encouraging the development of staff forums where they can connect with their colleagues and have the platform to identify issues and bring forward suggestions to improve the way they work.
Coach
Coaching or mentoring staff to help them reach their full potential can be very effective for developing employees. This can contribute to career progression and staff retention.
When employees receive guidance and support to develop their skills, they are more likely to take on roles with added responsibility. You could offer staff opportunities to work in different teams or alongside managers on a specific project where they are coached through the key responsibilities of the job role. See mentoring to increase staff performance.
Contribute
Giving staff the opportunity to contribute to how the business operates gives them more meaning to their job. It leads staff to become invested in the success of the business and, therefore, more motivated and productive. You can encourage staff to contribute through regular staff surveys or by encouraging feedback and ideas on particular business problems. For further ideas, see encourage staff feedback and ideas.
Congratulate
To maintain high levels of engagement, ensure you recognise and reward staff for their efforts to engage and contribute to the organisation. Develop a culture of staff recognition by thanking them on a personal level when an employee has achieved a significant objective or suggested an idea for business improvement. You could host staff recognition events on an annual basis to formally recognise and reward specific achievements.
Outlined below are areas that businesses should address in order to establish effective employee engagement.
Business strategy
Staff should be made aware of where your business is going, why it is taking the direction it is, and how it aims to get there. This can be achieved through a clear strategic narrative or business story. This helps employees develop a sense of value by understanding how their role fits in with the wider scope of the business and how they contribute to organisational goals. See communicate your business strategy and gain employee buy-in.
Engaging managers
Engaging managers who motivate, challenge, and support employees, treat them as individuals, and seek and respond to their views are key to employee engagement.
Employee engagement starts with managers showing a clear and collective commitment to making employee engagement part of business culture. This means sharing information on business plans and performance, making sure you live your business values, and seeking views and ideas from employees on how to improve your business. Managers who actively listen to employees and act on their opinions and suggestions for improvement, where appropriate, are more likely to encourage effective engagement from other members of staff. See how to be an engaging manager.
Communication
Effective two-way communication, which listens to employees and involves and consults them in decision-making within your business, is important. Communicate business information with staff and urge them to raise concerns and support the way you do business. Make it as easy as possible for staff to communicate and engage with you and management, for example, through regular staff surveys or online suggestion forms. To further encourage staff engagement, you could reward ideas that are implemented in the organisation.
Integrity
Integrity with employee engagement means practicing what you preach and adhering to your business values. There shouldn't be a gap between what the people in your business say and what they do. Build a culture that enables staff to share information and encourages open-mindedness. Respond to employee ideas or suggestions when they are brought forward. Integrity helps build the trust required to enable effective employee engagement.
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Employee engagement champions
How identifying and empowering employee engagement champions can mobilise engagement across your business to deliver positive results.
Identifying and establishing employee engagement champions in different departments or teams throughout your business can help sow the seeds for further employee engagement throughout the rest of your organisation. Employee engagement champions, when given the responsibility and ownership to drive engagement, can help build a culture of engagement that can deliver positive results for your business, including increased productivity, more efficient processes, and better performance.
Role of engagement champions
Employee engagement champions have a key role in linking managers with the ideas and experiences of employees. The role of employee engagement champions can be as narrow or as broad as you like. You could ask them to focus on one particular issue, or you could give them a broader remit.
The scope of the employee engagement champion role is up to you, but there are some key aspects:
- helping to share information and key messages about the business with colleagues
- seeking examples and proof points of good practice from colleagues
- collecting feedback or issues from employees and presenting this to management to address and take action
The role of engagement champion is not time-consuming. It would be a voluntary or additional part of an employee's job but in order to encourage uptake you could highlight how the role would help to develop some key skills.
Engagement champions: key qualities
Employee engagement champions need to be willing and enthusiastic. They should already understand the importance of engagement and are keen to help the business improve. They could be in any area and at any level of the business.
The key qualities of engagement champions are:
- understanding of engagement - what it means and its business benefits
- enthusiasm and energy for the subject or area that they will be the engagement champion for
- knowledge of the business and the people in their area
- connections and credibility among their colleagues
- confidence to deal with others and facilitate productive discussions on behalf of the organisation
- confidence to handle feedback, whether positive or negative, on behalf of the organisation
Preparation for engagement champions
Employee engagement champions need information and guidance to help them in their role. This will also help you ensure shared understanding and consistency of approach across the business. Some core steps to consider are:
- a briefing pack for each employee engagement champion
- a short training session or workshop
- if you have an intranet, create a private section where engagement champions can liaise with each other and share experiences, questions, and best practices
Employee engagement briefing pack
In the employee engagement briefing pack, you could include:
- a letter from you explaining the importance of the role and thanking them for taking it on
- a summary sheet on the importance and benefits of engagement - see advantages of employee engagement
- a summary of the key activities that will be required to foster staff engagement
- a copy of the business strategy and business values
- contact details for other engagement champions and other colleagues they may need to liaise or partner with - eg, people running internal communications or other employee networks
Making employee engagement happen
To help shape and embed employee engagement champions in everyday practice, you could:
- discuss the idea with other senior managers and gain overall agreement on the approach
- involve colleagues from HR or communications - if you have them - to help delegate or share some tasks and responsibilities
- contact each champion so they understand the importance of their role and are inspired
- contact each champion's manager to gain their support
- ask one of the champions to coordinate and report back to you
For further ideas, see how to encourage engagement in your business.
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Five top tips to increase employee engagement
Five practical tips to help you establish effective employee engagement that delivers positive results for your business.
Employee engagement delivers a number of advantages for businesses. An effectively engaged workforce feels valued, committed, highly motivated, and is more productive. This leads to organisations being more efficient in what they do, more creative in how they do things, and more effective in delivering results.
Five tips for staff engagement
Follow our five tips to help you increase employee engagement in your organisation.
1. Listen to employees
Actively listen to your staff, and ask them for ideas for improvement and their opinions on business matters. Make it easy for staff to share their views and communicate with you. For example, through regular staff surveys, staff suggestion boxes, or forums that focus on specific business issues. This will help staff feel valued and invested in the success of your business.
2. Keep staff informed
Have a clear internal communications strategy and keep staff regularly updated on developments that may affect them. For example, you can keep employees informed through intranet updates, email communications, and face-to-face meetings. Good communication helps grow trust within your organisation and prevents the opportunity for rumours to develop.
3. Establish the right culture
Strive to create a working environment that is open and inclusive, where staff feel valued and supported. Create a culture where staff are not afraid to challenge how things are currently done and are willing to suggest new ideas.
4. Empower your staff
Give employees the autonomy to get the job done. Ensure staff understand the importance of their role and where they fit into the organisation's plans. Let them take responsibility for achieving business goals and new projects, or challenges. This will help staff feel trusted, develop their skills, and may lead to more efficient ways of doing things. Appointing employee engagement champions can be a good way to empower your staff to drive engagement.
5. Show your appreciation
If staff have suggested new ideas or different ways of doing things, you should acknowledge their efforts. Respond to the feedback you receive. Explain why you aren't going to act on an idea, and recognise and reward ideas that are implemented. This can also incentivise other staff to engage.
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Retain and retrain older workers
In this guide:
Employment rights of older workers
How employers can meet the legal rights of older workers including retirement age, age discrimination, and caring for dependants including grandchildren and parents.
Employers should fully understand employment rights and the role of equal opportunities, practices, and procedures relating to older workers.
Recent years have seen the introduction of various policy reforms to encourage the participation and retention of older workers in employment.
How to prevent workplace age discrimination
It is generally unlawful for an employer to discriminate on the grounds of age - ie, to treat individuals of any age less favourably than others on the grounds of age.
Recruitment
To avoid age discrimination, you should check that your recruitment process is non-discriminatory. For example, aim to place advertisements in publications read by a range of age groups. Also, avoid using terms that imply a particular age group, such as 'mature', 'enthusiastic', 'highly experienced', or 'recent graduate'. See avoid discrimination when recruiting staff.
Redundancies
If you are making employees redundant, you should similarly ensure that you base procedures on business needs rather than age. For example, it could be discriminatory to select employees for redundancy solely based on when they joined your business - 'last in, first out'. See redundancy and lay-offs.
When age discrimination may be lawful
There are limited circumstances when age discrimination can be lawful. To read about age discrimination exceptions and examples, see age discrimination.
Develop age-related work policies
Age discrimination can affect workers of any age. Having an equal opportunities policy that explicitly mentions age could indicate your commitment to the fair treatment of and eliminating discrimination against workers of all ages. See equality and diversity workplace policies.
Training
You should also ensure appropriate training is provided to your managers and staff on workplace discrimination, with some focus on age discrimination. This will help to increase awareness of age discrimination and how to minimise it in the workplace.
Understand the rules for retirement
The statutory default retirement age in the UK was abolished in 2011. As a result, if an employer forces an employee to retire once they reach a certain age, that act would be direct age discrimination and is likely to be unlawful unless it can be objectively justified. See retirement ages and procedures.
An employee can retire voluntarily at a time that they choose and beyond their state pension age unless the job has a lawfully justified 'compulsory retirement age'. The reasons for compulsory retirement may include exceptional circumstances such as:
- the job requires certain physical abilities (eg, in the construction industry)
- the job has an age limit set by law (eg, commercial pilots)
Employers who set compulsory retirement age rules, also known as Employer Justified Retirement Ages (EJRA), must consider whether that retirement age can be objectively justified, for example, in terms of workforce planning, or the health and safety of individual employees, their colleagues, and the public. In addition, an employer will need to demonstrate that the compulsory retirement age is objectively justified; ie, that it is a proportionate means of achieving that objective.
See the Equality Commission's guide for employers on age discrimination in Northern Ireland (PDF, 1.53MB).
Provide flexible working arrangements
Older workers may prefer flexible working arrangements.
Every employee has the statutory right to request flexible working for any reason after 26 weeks of employment. Employees can make one flexible working application every 12 months. A year runs from the date the most recent application was made. If you accept an employee's flexible working request, this will be a permanent change to their contractual terms and conditions unless you agree otherwise.
There are different forms of flexible working, for example, homeworking, temporary contracts, part-time, flexitime, or job sharing. Employers should ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to staff of all ages. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Caring for grandchildren and dependants: rights at work
Apart from the right to request flexible working arrangements, outlined above, under employment law in Northern Ireland grandparents, generally, have no other statutory rights to paid or unpaid time off to care for their grandchildren.
Grandparents may have the right to parental leave in limited circumstances if they have adopted the child or have a residence order made in their favour giving them parental responsibility. Employees must have one year's employment service, and parental leave can be taken up until the child's 18th birthday. See parental leave entitlement.
All employees have the right to reasonable time off for dependants to deal with emergencies or unforeseen matters involving someone who depends on them for caring responsibilities. This could be to deal with a breakdown in childcare or if a child falls ill. It could also be used to deal with caring responsibilities for older relatives or parents who may be ill. Employers do not have to pay for this time off, but some employers may under the terms and conditions of employment. See time off to deal with emergencies involving dependants.
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Advantages of employing and retaining older workers
Key benefits that employing and retaining older workers can bring to businesses.
There is a wide range of advantages that employing older workers can bring to your business, especially when you have a mix of different ages across your workforce.
Age-diversity benefits
Age diversity can bring many benefits to your business. Employers can reap the benefits of experience and loyalty that older workers can bring. There may also be broader advantages for others within the workplace.
Working in an age-diverse team brings benefits, including fresh perspectives, knowledge-sharing, and improved problem-solving. Where there is an age-diverse workforce, businesses have seen advantages including:
- increased productivity
- skills diversity
- better inclusiveness
- opportunities for mentorships
- improved staff retention
Benefits of employing older workers
Employing older workers can bring the following advantages to your business:
Experience and knowledge
Older workers bring life experience as well as accumulated knowledge from many years of working. You can tap into these strengths to help overcome workplace challenges and identify business opportunities.
New ideas and opportunities
If you are developing new ideas or searching for new business opportunities, an age-diverse workforce can prove helpful in weighing up the potential risks and benefits. Such foresight can help suggest new ideas or efficient ways of doing things.
Focused workers
Older workers are likely to analyse business tasks from a measured or calculated point of view rather than from an emotional one. This, in turn, can lead to fewer mistakes.
Problem-solving
Older workers with their experience, maturity, and often calming influence can help solve problems that may arise in the workplace, whether they are difficult business decisions or workplace conflict.
Positive role models
Older workers can be a positive influence on younger or less experienced workers. They often perform well in training or mentoring roles.
Resilience
Older workers are likely to have experienced difficult times throughout their working life, and so are often resilient when faced with a business challenge.
Commitment
On average, older workers report higher job satisfaction and are less likely to switch jobs. A reduction in staff turnover can create stability in the workforce and is more cost-effective than recruiting and retraining new staff. See control staff turnover.
Adaptability
Older workers are likely to have experienced frequent changes during their working careers, so they often adapt well to the need for new skills and changing technology.
Responsibility
Older workers are inclined to take on roles that require a level of responsibility, such as management positions, and are often willing to accept accountability if things go wrong.
Customer service
Older workers usually place value on customer service, which can help you similarly maintain a focus on providing quality service.
Consider the challenges too
Despite the many advantages, there are some possible challenges for employers managing older workers, as with staff of any age. See ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers.
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Ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers
How employers can identify and address the challenges of an ageing workforce.
The steps for effectively managing older workers are the same as for staff of any age. However, there are some issues that affect older workers in particular. It is important to understand the challenges that older employees might face and take steps to support them.
Challenges for older workers
Challenges for older workers can include:
Age discrimination
There are often stereotypes of older workers being less agile, technophobic, more prone to sickness absence, and resistant to change. Read how to avoid age discrimination.
Part-time or flexible working requirements
Part-time work and the demand for flexible working are more common among older workers than among younger age groups. Ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to all staff. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working.
See flexible working for over 50s - a toolkit for employers (PDF, 3.63MB).
Physical or mental challenges of job roles
Employers must make reasonable adjustments to ensure workers with disabilities, such as physical or mental health conditions, aren't substantially disadvantaged when doing their jobs. See improve access and use of facilities for disabled employees and managing and supporting employees with mental ill health.
Absenteeism
Promoting staff wellbeing and healthier lifestyles can also help reduce staff absences due to sickness. Employers should address this by asking workers if there is anything they can do to support them, so they are happier in the workplace and absences are minimised.
Caring responsibilities
Older workers often have caring responsibilities, eg, for elderly parents. This can cause stress and worry about the health and wellbeing of a close relative. The worker may also need to take time off work to help care for a relative, eg, to take an elderly parent to a hospital appointment. Employees with elder care responsibilities should be offered the same flexibility as those with childcare responsibilities.
Retirement age
The statutory default retirement age has been abolished, so most people can now work for as long as they want to. If an employee chooses to work longer, they can't be discriminated against unlawfully on the grounds of age. Employers should support staff with planning their future career development goals and the transition from employment to retirement when an employee decides to retire. See training your staff and providing support for a retiring employee.
Older women and the menopause
Health issues affect all workers, but some can be overlooked by employers. While many women may go through menopause with relatively little discomfort, many others report a range of symptoms such as hot flushes, irritability, sleep disturbances, fatigue, depression, impaired memory, and anxiety. Menopause awareness amongst managers and the option of flexible working may help female staff. See menopause in the workplace: employer guidance.
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Recruiting older workers
How employers can recruit fairly and avoid age discrimination when taking on new staff including older workers.
You must not discriminate on the grounds of age when recruiting new staff. The Employment Equality (Age) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 prohibit all employers, regardless of size, from subjecting job applicants and employees, including contract workers and former employees, to age discrimination and harassment. See more on age discrimination.
Age-neutral job adverts
You should use age-neutral language when advertising for job roles. References such as 'young', 'energetic', or 'recently qualified' are best avoided as this would discriminate against older workers. You could also consider using a strapline in job adverts to welcome all-age applicants, ensuring your organisation overcomes any unconscious bias or discrimination by tracking age profiles of successful candidates and potentially offering apprenticeships for older workers as well as the young.
During recruitment, you should evaluate candidates according to values, behaviours, competencies demonstrated, and their ability to do the job. See advertising a job and interviewing candidates.
Experience
Requirements when it comes to experience should be described in terms of type or depth of experience rather than a simple number of years of experience.
Qualifications
Applicants should only be asked for qualifications that are necessary for a job role. Looking for graduates might not be necessary for a particular role and may discriminate against older workers.
Interviewing
Avoid unscripted interviews, as this can often lead to discrimination when panel members ask inappropriate questions. You should ask the same questions to all candidates to ensure a fair, even, and unbiased interview process. Prepare the questions in advance and identify points that you would like candidates to address when answering their interview questions.
Promote your age-positive workplace
You can also promote your business as an age-positive employer. You could highlight the diverse age range in your workforce by featuring various members of staff through your company website or social media channels. Staff could share messages on why they enjoy working for you, and if there is any specific workplace support that you provide for them.
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Retain and retrain older workers
How employers can make efforts to retain staff to secure key skills and experience and how retraining older workers may be beneficial.
As an employer, you should take action to create a working environment that enables workers to develop and fulfil their potential and encourages them to stay. Recruiting and training new staff can be costly. Also, valuable skills and experience may be lost when an employee leaves, so you should make every effort to retain staff.
Retain and transfer key skills
You should plan effectively for an ageing workforce. Consider carrying out an age and skills audit to ensure you are making the most of staff knowledge and skills. This planning will help you identify your skills needs when there are future staff changes.
You should focus on how you facilitate the transfer of knowledge to younger staff, for example, through mentoring or getting older workers involved in planning and leading training and development programmes.
Retain existing workers
By providing workplace flexibility, you are considering the needs of all your workers.
Employers should consider the introduction of age-friendly workplace policies in areas that affect older workers, such as:
Flexible working
This can help to accommodate caring responsibilities, health considerations or changing the nature of a job role to lessen its physical demands. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Phased retirement
See retirement ages and procedures.
Family care leave
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
Career gap breaks
Offer career breaks for staff so that they can deal with family responsibilities or pursue other interests with the security of returning to their job after a certain period of time.
Health and wellbeing
You could look at ways in which you promote healthy ageing in the workplace. For example, you could introduce fitness programmes at lunchtime or awareness sessions around healthy eating. See staff health and wellbeing.
Financial and retirement planning support
Employers can offer older staff the opportunity to understand their financial requirements for retirement. The age friendly training service from Age NI offers an opportunity for individuals aged 50+ to reflect and take a look at interrelated areas of their lives and provide an overview of three key areas:
- financial wellbeing
- health and wellbeing
- career support
Employers can request group sessions to be delivered for their staff.
Alumni programmes
Rather than lose contact with workers when they leave your employment, you could look at creating an alumni programme that enables you to get insight into your business's successes and failures. You can also turn former employees into engaged brand ambassadors who can help promote your business as an ideal place to work.
Staff training and retraining
Retraining existing staff can be a cost-effective way of developing your existing talent pool and accessing new skills that your business requires. Staff retraining can also help reduce staff turnover as workers undergoing training will feel more valued, confident and motivated to do their job.
Age must not be a barrier to training opportunities - no one is ever too old to learn new skills. Older workers tend to be loyal and are less likely to change jobs frequently, so your business is likely to see the benefits of investing in training before the employee retires.
It is best practice for employers to discuss with their employees, regardless of age, their future aims and goals. This will help plan training and development needs. You should document any personal development discussion, hold the record for as long as there is a business need and provide a copy to the employee. See training your staff.
Age-Friendly Employer Pledge
As an employer, you can show you recognise the importance and value of older workers by committing to the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge. This initiative, run by the Centre for Ageing Better, outlines your commitment to promoting an age-friendly workplace through a number of actions.
Read further details on the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge.
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Five top tips to promote an age-diverse workforce
How employers can create a workplace that is inclusive to workers of all ages to give them a competitive advantage in recruitment and retention.
Research shows that businesses that promote an age-diverse workplace can benefit in many ways. Age diversity improves performance and productivity, reduces employee turnover, helps to drive innovation, and promotes stability.
Tips to create an age-inclusive workplace
We have outlined five top tips to help you create a workplace environment and culture where workers of all ages can feel welcomed, valued, and supported. These tips are especially helpful for older workers who may feel underrepresented and sometimes overlooked in the workplace.
1. Recruit from all age ranges
Develop an age-inclusive recruitment strategy to attract job applicants from all age ranges. To encourage older workers to apply for job vacancies, consider the language in your job descriptions and advertisements to avoid age bias. If you are an age-inclusive employer, promote this as part of your recruitment drive. Advertise your job vacancies across various media and digital channels to reach applicants from a diverse range of ages.
Examine the benefits package your organisation offers to attract job applicants and look at ways in which you could attract older workers, eg, offering flexible or part-time work. You should also take steps to ensure that staff are aware of how best to reduce bias and avoid discrimination throughout the recruitment process. See recruiting older workers.
2. Develop workplace policies promoting age-inclusiveness
Assess your current workplace policies on whether they help to promote age-inclusiveness. Adapt and enhance those existing policies where required. Identify gaps and determine if there are new policies that you could introduce to combat age discrimination and promote age-inclusiveness in your workplace.
Communicate and promote age-inclusiveness as part of your equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) strategy to make sure your staff and potential recruits are aware of the steps you are taking as an organisation to welcome people of all ages.
3. Identify and offer support on issues specific to older workers
Consider and offer help on issues that are specific to older workers, such as:
- health, eg, menopause or reduced mobility;
- finance, eg, pensions and planning for retirement;
- caring responsibilities, eg, responsibility for an elderly parent or relative.
The best way to understand the issues facing your workers is to ask them. Create a staff forum or working group and get employees involved from a diverse range of ages in identifying and providing solutions to key challenges.
There are several organisations that provide guidance and advice to older people - you could provide signposts to this information, perhaps through a dedicated organisational intranet page.
4. Create an environment for shared learning
Older workers usually have a wealth of knowledge and experience. Provide an environment and culture that encourages knowledge and learning exchanges between workers in your organisation of different ages and varying levels of experience. This will ensure that vital knowledge and experience are not lost when older workers retire, but are transferred to younger and newer staff.
Provide opportunities for older and younger workers to interact and mix, eg, by building mixed-age teams and hosting age-inclusive social events. See training methods to fit your business.
5. Offer training and development opportunities that appeal to workers of all ages
Provide training and development opportunities that are attractive and open to workers of all ages. Consider that older workers may want to retrain on new technologies and processes that have been introduced into your organisation. Ensure that any development opportunities don't have any barriers that would prevent older workers from applying. See training your staff.
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Recruiting older workers
In this guide:
Employment rights of older workers
How employers can meet the legal rights of older workers including retirement age, age discrimination, and caring for dependants including grandchildren and parents.
Employers should fully understand employment rights and the role of equal opportunities, practices, and procedures relating to older workers.
Recent years have seen the introduction of various policy reforms to encourage the participation and retention of older workers in employment.
How to prevent workplace age discrimination
It is generally unlawful for an employer to discriminate on the grounds of age - ie, to treat individuals of any age less favourably than others on the grounds of age.
Recruitment
To avoid age discrimination, you should check that your recruitment process is non-discriminatory. For example, aim to place advertisements in publications read by a range of age groups. Also, avoid using terms that imply a particular age group, such as 'mature', 'enthusiastic', 'highly experienced', or 'recent graduate'. See avoid discrimination when recruiting staff.
Redundancies
If you are making employees redundant, you should similarly ensure that you base procedures on business needs rather than age. For example, it could be discriminatory to select employees for redundancy solely based on when they joined your business - 'last in, first out'. See redundancy and lay-offs.
When age discrimination may be lawful
There are limited circumstances when age discrimination can be lawful. To read about age discrimination exceptions and examples, see age discrimination.
Develop age-related work policies
Age discrimination can affect workers of any age. Having an equal opportunities policy that explicitly mentions age could indicate your commitment to the fair treatment of and eliminating discrimination against workers of all ages. See equality and diversity workplace policies.
Training
You should also ensure appropriate training is provided to your managers and staff on workplace discrimination, with some focus on age discrimination. This will help to increase awareness of age discrimination and how to minimise it in the workplace.
Understand the rules for retirement
The statutory default retirement age in the UK was abolished in 2011. As a result, if an employer forces an employee to retire once they reach a certain age, that act would be direct age discrimination and is likely to be unlawful unless it can be objectively justified. See retirement ages and procedures.
An employee can retire voluntarily at a time that they choose and beyond their state pension age unless the job has a lawfully justified 'compulsory retirement age'. The reasons for compulsory retirement may include exceptional circumstances such as:
- the job requires certain physical abilities (eg, in the construction industry)
- the job has an age limit set by law (eg, commercial pilots)
Employers who set compulsory retirement age rules, also known as Employer Justified Retirement Ages (EJRA), must consider whether that retirement age can be objectively justified, for example, in terms of workforce planning, or the health and safety of individual employees, their colleagues, and the public. In addition, an employer will need to demonstrate that the compulsory retirement age is objectively justified; ie, that it is a proportionate means of achieving that objective.
See the Equality Commission's guide for employers on age discrimination in Northern Ireland (PDF, 1.53MB).
Provide flexible working arrangements
Older workers may prefer flexible working arrangements.
Every employee has the statutory right to request flexible working for any reason after 26 weeks of employment. Employees can make one flexible working application every 12 months. A year runs from the date the most recent application was made. If you accept an employee's flexible working request, this will be a permanent change to their contractual terms and conditions unless you agree otherwise.
There are different forms of flexible working, for example, homeworking, temporary contracts, part-time, flexitime, or job sharing. Employers should ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to staff of all ages. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Caring for grandchildren and dependants: rights at work
Apart from the right to request flexible working arrangements, outlined above, under employment law in Northern Ireland grandparents, generally, have no other statutory rights to paid or unpaid time off to care for their grandchildren.
Grandparents may have the right to parental leave in limited circumstances if they have adopted the child or have a residence order made in their favour giving them parental responsibility. Employees must have one year's employment service, and parental leave can be taken up until the child's 18th birthday. See parental leave entitlement.
All employees have the right to reasonable time off for dependants to deal with emergencies or unforeseen matters involving someone who depends on them for caring responsibilities. This could be to deal with a breakdown in childcare or if a child falls ill. It could also be used to deal with caring responsibilities for older relatives or parents who may be ill. Employers do not have to pay for this time off, but some employers may under the terms and conditions of employment. See time off to deal with emergencies involving dependants.
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Advantages of employing and retaining older workers
Key benefits that employing and retaining older workers can bring to businesses.
There is a wide range of advantages that employing older workers can bring to your business, especially when you have a mix of different ages across your workforce.
Age-diversity benefits
Age diversity can bring many benefits to your business. Employers can reap the benefits of experience and loyalty that older workers can bring. There may also be broader advantages for others within the workplace.
Working in an age-diverse team brings benefits, including fresh perspectives, knowledge-sharing, and improved problem-solving. Where there is an age-diverse workforce, businesses have seen advantages including:
- increased productivity
- skills diversity
- better inclusiveness
- opportunities for mentorships
- improved staff retention
Benefits of employing older workers
Employing older workers can bring the following advantages to your business:
Experience and knowledge
Older workers bring life experience as well as accumulated knowledge from many years of working. You can tap into these strengths to help overcome workplace challenges and identify business opportunities.
New ideas and opportunities
If you are developing new ideas or searching for new business opportunities, an age-diverse workforce can prove helpful in weighing up the potential risks and benefits. Such foresight can help suggest new ideas or efficient ways of doing things.
Focused workers
Older workers are likely to analyse business tasks from a measured or calculated point of view rather than from an emotional one. This, in turn, can lead to fewer mistakes.
Problem-solving
Older workers with their experience, maturity, and often calming influence can help solve problems that may arise in the workplace, whether they are difficult business decisions or workplace conflict.
Positive role models
Older workers can be a positive influence on younger or less experienced workers. They often perform well in training or mentoring roles.
Resilience
Older workers are likely to have experienced difficult times throughout their working life, and so are often resilient when faced with a business challenge.
Commitment
On average, older workers report higher job satisfaction and are less likely to switch jobs. A reduction in staff turnover can create stability in the workforce and is more cost-effective than recruiting and retraining new staff. See control staff turnover.
Adaptability
Older workers are likely to have experienced frequent changes during their working careers, so they often adapt well to the need for new skills and changing technology.
Responsibility
Older workers are inclined to take on roles that require a level of responsibility, such as management positions, and are often willing to accept accountability if things go wrong.
Customer service
Older workers usually place value on customer service, which can help you similarly maintain a focus on providing quality service.
Consider the challenges too
Despite the many advantages, there are some possible challenges for employers managing older workers, as with staff of any age. See ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers.
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Ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers
How employers can identify and address the challenges of an ageing workforce.
The steps for effectively managing older workers are the same as for staff of any age. However, there are some issues that affect older workers in particular. It is important to understand the challenges that older employees might face and take steps to support them.
Challenges for older workers
Challenges for older workers can include:
Age discrimination
There are often stereotypes of older workers being less agile, technophobic, more prone to sickness absence, and resistant to change. Read how to avoid age discrimination.
Part-time or flexible working requirements
Part-time work and the demand for flexible working are more common among older workers than among younger age groups. Ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to all staff. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working.
See flexible working for over 50s - a toolkit for employers (PDF, 3.63MB).
Physical or mental challenges of job roles
Employers must make reasonable adjustments to ensure workers with disabilities, such as physical or mental health conditions, aren't substantially disadvantaged when doing their jobs. See improve access and use of facilities for disabled employees and managing and supporting employees with mental ill health.
Absenteeism
Promoting staff wellbeing and healthier lifestyles can also help reduce staff absences due to sickness. Employers should address this by asking workers if there is anything they can do to support them, so they are happier in the workplace and absences are minimised.
Caring responsibilities
Older workers often have caring responsibilities, eg, for elderly parents. This can cause stress and worry about the health and wellbeing of a close relative. The worker may also need to take time off work to help care for a relative, eg, to take an elderly parent to a hospital appointment. Employees with elder care responsibilities should be offered the same flexibility as those with childcare responsibilities.
Retirement age
The statutory default retirement age has been abolished, so most people can now work for as long as they want to. If an employee chooses to work longer, they can't be discriminated against unlawfully on the grounds of age. Employers should support staff with planning their future career development goals and the transition from employment to retirement when an employee decides to retire. See training your staff and providing support for a retiring employee.
Older women and the menopause
Health issues affect all workers, but some can be overlooked by employers. While many women may go through menopause with relatively little discomfort, many others report a range of symptoms such as hot flushes, irritability, sleep disturbances, fatigue, depression, impaired memory, and anxiety. Menopause awareness amongst managers and the option of flexible working may help female staff. See menopause in the workplace: employer guidance.
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Recruiting older workers
How employers can recruit fairly and avoid age discrimination when taking on new staff including older workers.
You must not discriminate on the grounds of age when recruiting new staff. The Employment Equality (Age) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 prohibit all employers, regardless of size, from subjecting job applicants and employees, including contract workers and former employees, to age discrimination and harassment. See more on age discrimination.
Age-neutral job adverts
You should use age-neutral language when advertising for job roles. References such as 'young', 'energetic', or 'recently qualified' are best avoided as this would discriminate against older workers. You could also consider using a strapline in job adverts to welcome all-age applicants, ensuring your organisation overcomes any unconscious bias or discrimination by tracking age profiles of successful candidates and potentially offering apprenticeships for older workers as well as the young.
During recruitment, you should evaluate candidates according to values, behaviours, competencies demonstrated, and their ability to do the job. See advertising a job and interviewing candidates.
Experience
Requirements when it comes to experience should be described in terms of type or depth of experience rather than a simple number of years of experience.
Qualifications
Applicants should only be asked for qualifications that are necessary for a job role. Looking for graduates might not be necessary for a particular role and may discriminate against older workers.
Interviewing
Avoid unscripted interviews, as this can often lead to discrimination when panel members ask inappropriate questions. You should ask the same questions to all candidates to ensure a fair, even, and unbiased interview process. Prepare the questions in advance and identify points that you would like candidates to address when answering their interview questions.
Promote your age-positive workplace
You can also promote your business as an age-positive employer. You could highlight the diverse age range in your workforce by featuring various members of staff through your company website or social media channels. Staff could share messages on why they enjoy working for you, and if there is any specific workplace support that you provide for them.
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Retain and retrain older workers
How employers can make efforts to retain staff to secure key skills and experience and how retraining older workers may be beneficial.
As an employer, you should take action to create a working environment that enables workers to develop and fulfil their potential and encourages them to stay. Recruiting and training new staff can be costly. Also, valuable skills and experience may be lost when an employee leaves, so you should make every effort to retain staff.
Retain and transfer key skills
You should plan effectively for an ageing workforce. Consider carrying out an age and skills audit to ensure you are making the most of staff knowledge and skills. This planning will help you identify your skills needs when there are future staff changes.
You should focus on how you facilitate the transfer of knowledge to younger staff, for example, through mentoring or getting older workers involved in planning and leading training and development programmes.
Retain existing workers
By providing workplace flexibility, you are considering the needs of all your workers.
Employers should consider the introduction of age-friendly workplace policies in areas that affect older workers, such as:
Flexible working
This can help to accommodate caring responsibilities, health considerations or changing the nature of a job role to lessen its physical demands. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Phased retirement
See retirement ages and procedures.
Family care leave
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
Career gap breaks
Offer career breaks for staff so that they can deal with family responsibilities or pursue other interests with the security of returning to their job after a certain period of time.
Health and wellbeing
You could look at ways in which you promote healthy ageing in the workplace. For example, you could introduce fitness programmes at lunchtime or awareness sessions around healthy eating. See staff health and wellbeing.
Financial and retirement planning support
Employers can offer older staff the opportunity to understand their financial requirements for retirement. The age friendly training service from Age NI offers an opportunity for individuals aged 50+ to reflect and take a look at interrelated areas of their lives and provide an overview of three key areas:
- financial wellbeing
- health and wellbeing
- career support
Employers can request group sessions to be delivered for their staff.
Alumni programmes
Rather than lose contact with workers when they leave your employment, you could look at creating an alumni programme that enables you to get insight into your business's successes and failures. You can also turn former employees into engaged brand ambassadors who can help promote your business as an ideal place to work.
Staff training and retraining
Retraining existing staff can be a cost-effective way of developing your existing talent pool and accessing new skills that your business requires. Staff retraining can also help reduce staff turnover as workers undergoing training will feel more valued, confident and motivated to do their job.
Age must not be a barrier to training opportunities - no one is ever too old to learn new skills. Older workers tend to be loyal and are less likely to change jobs frequently, so your business is likely to see the benefits of investing in training before the employee retires.
It is best practice for employers to discuss with their employees, regardless of age, their future aims and goals. This will help plan training and development needs. You should document any personal development discussion, hold the record for as long as there is a business need and provide a copy to the employee. See training your staff.
Age-Friendly Employer Pledge
As an employer, you can show you recognise the importance and value of older workers by committing to the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge. This initiative, run by the Centre for Ageing Better, outlines your commitment to promoting an age-friendly workplace through a number of actions.
Read further details on the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge.
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Five top tips to promote an age-diverse workforce
How employers can create a workplace that is inclusive to workers of all ages to give them a competitive advantage in recruitment and retention.
Research shows that businesses that promote an age-diverse workplace can benefit in many ways. Age diversity improves performance and productivity, reduces employee turnover, helps to drive innovation, and promotes stability.
Tips to create an age-inclusive workplace
We have outlined five top tips to help you create a workplace environment and culture where workers of all ages can feel welcomed, valued, and supported. These tips are especially helpful for older workers who may feel underrepresented and sometimes overlooked in the workplace.
1. Recruit from all age ranges
Develop an age-inclusive recruitment strategy to attract job applicants from all age ranges. To encourage older workers to apply for job vacancies, consider the language in your job descriptions and advertisements to avoid age bias. If you are an age-inclusive employer, promote this as part of your recruitment drive. Advertise your job vacancies across various media and digital channels to reach applicants from a diverse range of ages.
Examine the benefits package your organisation offers to attract job applicants and look at ways in which you could attract older workers, eg, offering flexible or part-time work. You should also take steps to ensure that staff are aware of how best to reduce bias and avoid discrimination throughout the recruitment process. See recruiting older workers.
2. Develop workplace policies promoting age-inclusiveness
Assess your current workplace policies on whether they help to promote age-inclusiveness. Adapt and enhance those existing policies where required. Identify gaps and determine if there are new policies that you could introduce to combat age discrimination and promote age-inclusiveness in your workplace.
Communicate and promote age-inclusiveness as part of your equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) strategy to make sure your staff and potential recruits are aware of the steps you are taking as an organisation to welcome people of all ages.
3. Identify and offer support on issues specific to older workers
Consider and offer help on issues that are specific to older workers, such as:
- health, eg, menopause or reduced mobility;
- finance, eg, pensions and planning for retirement;
- caring responsibilities, eg, responsibility for an elderly parent or relative.
The best way to understand the issues facing your workers is to ask them. Create a staff forum or working group and get employees involved from a diverse range of ages in identifying and providing solutions to key challenges.
There are several organisations that provide guidance and advice to older people - you could provide signposts to this information, perhaps through a dedicated organisational intranet page.
4. Create an environment for shared learning
Older workers usually have a wealth of knowledge and experience. Provide an environment and culture that encourages knowledge and learning exchanges between workers in your organisation of different ages and varying levels of experience. This will ensure that vital knowledge and experience are not lost when older workers retire, but are transferred to younger and newer staff.
Provide opportunities for older and younger workers to interact and mix, eg, by building mixed-age teams and hosting age-inclusive social events. See training methods to fit your business.
5. Offer training and development opportunities that appeal to workers of all ages
Provide training and development opportunities that are attractive and open to workers of all ages. Consider that older workers may want to retrain on new technologies and processes that have been introduced into your organisation. Ensure that any development opportunities don't have any barriers that would prevent older workers from applying. See training your staff.
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Ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers
In this guide:
Employment rights of older workers
How employers can meet the legal rights of older workers including retirement age, age discrimination, and caring for dependants including grandchildren and parents.
Employers should fully understand employment rights and the role of equal opportunities, practices, and procedures relating to older workers.
Recent years have seen the introduction of various policy reforms to encourage the participation and retention of older workers in employment.
How to prevent workplace age discrimination
It is generally unlawful for an employer to discriminate on the grounds of age - ie, to treat individuals of any age less favourably than others on the grounds of age.
Recruitment
To avoid age discrimination, you should check that your recruitment process is non-discriminatory. For example, aim to place advertisements in publications read by a range of age groups. Also, avoid using terms that imply a particular age group, such as 'mature', 'enthusiastic', 'highly experienced', or 'recent graduate'. See avoid discrimination when recruiting staff.
Redundancies
If you are making employees redundant, you should similarly ensure that you base procedures on business needs rather than age. For example, it could be discriminatory to select employees for redundancy solely based on when they joined your business - 'last in, first out'. See redundancy and lay-offs.
When age discrimination may be lawful
There are limited circumstances when age discrimination can be lawful. To read about age discrimination exceptions and examples, see age discrimination.
Develop age-related work policies
Age discrimination can affect workers of any age. Having an equal opportunities policy that explicitly mentions age could indicate your commitment to the fair treatment of and eliminating discrimination against workers of all ages. See equality and diversity workplace policies.
Training
You should also ensure appropriate training is provided to your managers and staff on workplace discrimination, with some focus on age discrimination. This will help to increase awareness of age discrimination and how to minimise it in the workplace.
Understand the rules for retirement
The statutory default retirement age in the UK was abolished in 2011. As a result, if an employer forces an employee to retire once they reach a certain age, that act would be direct age discrimination and is likely to be unlawful unless it can be objectively justified. See retirement ages and procedures.
An employee can retire voluntarily at a time that they choose and beyond their state pension age unless the job has a lawfully justified 'compulsory retirement age'. The reasons for compulsory retirement may include exceptional circumstances such as:
- the job requires certain physical abilities (eg, in the construction industry)
- the job has an age limit set by law (eg, commercial pilots)
Employers who set compulsory retirement age rules, also known as Employer Justified Retirement Ages (EJRA), must consider whether that retirement age can be objectively justified, for example, in terms of workforce planning, or the health and safety of individual employees, their colleagues, and the public. In addition, an employer will need to demonstrate that the compulsory retirement age is objectively justified; ie, that it is a proportionate means of achieving that objective.
See the Equality Commission's guide for employers on age discrimination in Northern Ireland (PDF, 1.53MB).
Provide flexible working arrangements
Older workers may prefer flexible working arrangements.
Every employee has the statutory right to request flexible working for any reason after 26 weeks of employment. Employees can make one flexible working application every 12 months. A year runs from the date the most recent application was made. If you accept an employee's flexible working request, this will be a permanent change to their contractual terms and conditions unless you agree otherwise.
There are different forms of flexible working, for example, homeworking, temporary contracts, part-time, flexitime, or job sharing. Employers should ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to staff of all ages. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Caring for grandchildren and dependants: rights at work
Apart from the right to request flexible working arrangements, outlined above, under employment law in Northern Ireland grandparents, generally, have no other statutory rights to paid or unpaid time off to care for their grandchildren.
Grandparents may have the right to parental leave in limited circumstances if they have adopted the child or have a residence order made in their favour giving them parental responsibility. Employees must have one year's employment service, and parental leave can be taken up until the child's 18th birthday. See parental leave entitlement.
All employees have the right to reasonable time off for dependants to deal with emergencies or unforeseen matters involving someone who depends on them for caring responsibilities. This could be to deal with a breakdown in childcare or if a child falls ill. It could also be used to deal with caring responsibilities for older relatives or parents who may be ill. Employers do not have to pay for this time off, but some employers may under the terms and conditions of employment. See time off to deal with emergencies involving dependants.
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Advantages of employing and retaining older workers
Key benefits that employing and retaining older workers can bring to businesses.
There is a wide range of advantages that employing older workers can bring to your business, especially when you have a mix of different ages across your workforce.
Age-diversity benefits
Age diversity can bring many benefits to your business. Employers can reap the benefits of experience and loyalty that older workers can bring. There may also be broader advantages for others within the workplace.
Working in an age-diverse team brings benefits, including fresh perspectives, knowledge-sharing, and improved problem-solving. Where there is an age-diverse workforce, businesses have seen advantages including:
- increased productivity
- skills diversity
- better inclusiveness
- opportunities for mentorships
- improved staff retention
Benefits of employing older workers
Employing older workers can bring the following advantages to your business:
Experience and knowledge
Older workers bring life experience as well as accumulated knowledge from many years of working. You can tap into these strengths to help overcome workplace challenges and identify business opportunities.
New ideas and opportunities
If you are developing new ideas or searching for new business opportunities, an age-diverse workforce can prove helpful in weighing up the potential risks and benefits. Such foresight can help suggest new ideas or efficient ways of doing things.
Focused workers
Older workers are likely to analyse business tasks from a measured or calculated point of view rather than from an emotional one. This, in turn, can lead to fewer mistakes.
Problem-solving
Older workers with their experience, maturity, and often calming influence can help solve problems that may arise in the workplace, whether they are difficult business decisions or workplace conflict.
Positive role models
Older workers can be a positive influence on younger or less experienced workers. They often perform well in training or mentoring roles.
Resilience
Older workers are likely to have experienced difficult times throughout their working life, and so are often resilient when faced with a business challenge.
Commitment
On average, older workers report higher job satisfaction and are less likely to switch jobs. A reduction in staff turnover can create stability in the workforce and is more cost-effective than recruiting and retraining new staff. See control staff turnover.
Adaptability
Older workers are likely to have experienced frequent changes during their working careers, so they often adapt well to the need for new skills and changing technology.
Responsibility
Older workers are inclined to take on roles that require a level of responsibility, such as management positions, and are often willing to accept accountability if things go wrong.
Customer service
Older workers usually place value on customer service, which can help you similarly maintain a focus on providing quality service.
Consider the challenges too
Despite the many advantages, there are some possible challenges for employers managing older workers, as with staff of any age. See ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers.
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Ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers
How employers can identify and address the challenges of an ageing workforce.
The steps for effectively managing older workers are the same as for staff of any age. However, there are some issues that affect older workers in particular. It is important to understand the challenges that older employees might face and take steps to support them.
Challenges for older workers
Challenges for older workers can include:
Age discrimination
There are often stereotypes of older workers being less agile, technophobic, more prone to sickness absence, and resistant to change. Read how to avoid age discrimination.
Part-time or flexible working requirements
Part-time work and the demand for flexible working are more common among older workers than among younger age groups. Ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to all staff. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working.
See flexible working for over 50s - a toolkit for employers (PDF, 3.63MB).
Physical or mental challenges of job roles
Employers must make reasonable adjustments to ensure workers with disabilities, such as physical or mental health conditions, aren't substantially disadvantaged when doing their jobs. See improve access and use of facilities for disabled employees and managing and supporting employees with mental ill health.
Absenteeism
Promoting staff wellbeing and healthier lifestyles can also help reduce staff absences due to sickness. Employers should address this by asking workers if there is anything they can do to support them, so they are happier in the workplace and absences are minimised.
Caring responsibilities
Older workers often have caring responsibilities, eg, for elderly parents. This can cause stress and worry about the health and wellbeing of a close relative. The worker may also need to take time off work to help care for a relative, eg, to take an elderly parent to a hospital appointment. Employees with elder care responsibilities should be offered the same flexibility as those with childcare responsibilities.
Retirement age
The statutory default retirement age has been abolished, so most people can now work for as long as they want to. If an employee chooses to work longer, they can't be discriminated against unlawfully on the grounds of age. Employers should support staff with planning their future career development goals and the transition from employment to retirement when an employee decides to retire. See training your staff and providing support for a retiring employee.
Older women and the menopause
Health issues affect all workers, but some can be overlooked by employers. While many women may go through menopause with relatively little discomfort, many others report a range of symptoms such as hot flushes, irritability, sleep disturbances, fatigue, depression, impaired memory, and anxiety. Menopause awareness amongst managers and the option of flexible working may help female staff. See menopause in the workplace: employer guidance.
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Recruiting older workers
How employers can recruit fairly and avoid age discrimination when taking on new staff including older workers.
You must not discriminate on the grounds of age when recruiting new staff. The Employment Equality (Age) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 prohibit all employers, regardless of size, from subjecting job applicants and employees, including contract workers and former employees, to age discrimination and harassment. See more on age discrimination.
Age-neutral job adverts
You should use age-neutral language when advertising for job roles. References such as 'young', 'energetic', or 'recently qualified' are best avoided as this would discriminate against older workers. You could also consider using a strapline in job adverts to welcome all-age applicants, ensuring your organisation overcomes any unconscious bias or discrimination by tracking age profiles of successful candidates and potentially offering apprenticeships for older workers as well as the young.
During recruitment, you should evaluate candidates according to values, behaviours, competencies demonstrated, and their ability to do the job. See advertising a job and interviewing candidates.
Experience
Requirements when it comes to experience should be described in terms of type or depth of experience rather than a simple number of years of experience.
Qualifications
Applicants should only be asked for qualifications that are necessary for a job role. Looking for graduates might not be necessary for a particular role and may discriminate against older workers.
Interviewing
Avoid unscripted interviews, as this can often lead to discrimination when panel members ask inappropriate questions. You should ask the same questions to all candidates to ensure a fair, even, and unbiased interview process. Prepare the questions in advance and identify points that you would like candidates to address when answering their interview questions.
Promote your age-positive workplace
You can also promote your business as an age-positive employer. You could highlight the diverse age range in your workforce by featuring various members of staff through your company website or social media channels. Staff could share messages on why they enjoy working for you, and if there is any specific workplace support that you provide for them.
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Source URL
/content/recruiting-older-workers
Links
Retain and retrain older workers
How employers can make efforts to retain staff to secure key skills and experience and how retraining older workers may be beneficial.
As an employer, you should take action to create a working environment that enables workers to develop and fulfil their potential and encourages them to stay. Recruiting and training new staff can be costly. Also, valuable skills and experience may be lost when an employee leaves, so you should make every effort to retain staff.
Retain and transfer key skills
You should plan effectively for an ageing workforce. Consider carrying out an age and skills audit to ensure you are making the most of staff knowledge and skills. This planning will help you identify your skills needs when there are future staff changes.
You should focus on how you facilitate the transfer of knowledge to younger staff, for example, through mentoring or getting older workers involved in planning and leading training and development programmes.
Retain existing workers
By providing workplace flexibility, you are considering the needs of all your workers.
Employers should consider the introduction of age-friendly workplace policies in areas that affect older workers, such as:
Flexible working
This can help to accommodate caring responsibilities, health considerations or changing the nature of a job role to lessen its physical demands. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Phased retirement
See retirement ages and procedures.
Family care leave
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
Career gap breaks
Offer career breaks for staff so that they can deal with family responsibilities or pursue other interests with the security of returning to their job after a certain period of time.
Health and wellbeing
You could look at ways in which you promote healthy ageing in the workplace. For example, you could introduce fitness programmes at lunchtime or awareness sessions around healthy eating. See staff health and wellbeing.
Financial and retirement planning support
Employers can offer older staff the opportunity to understand their financial requirements for retirement. The age friendly training service from Age NI offers an opportunity for individuals aged 50+ to reflect and take a look at interrelated areas of their lives and provide an overview of three key areas:
- financial wellbeing
- health and wellbeing
- career support
Employers can request group sessions to be delivered for their staff.
Alumni programmes
Rather than lose contact with workers when they leave your employment, you could look at creating an alumni programme that enables you to get insight into your business's successes and failures. You can also turn former employees into engaged brand ambassadors who can help promote your business as an ideal place to work.
Staff training and retraining
Retraining existing staff can be a cost-effective way of developing your existing talent pool and accessing new skills that your business requires. Staff retraining can also help reduce staff turnover as workers undergoing training will feel more valued, confident and motivated to do their job.
Age must not be a barrier to training opportunities - no one is ever too old to learn new skills. Older workers tend to be loyal and are less likely to change jobs frequently, so your business is likely to see the benefits of investing in training before the employee retires.
It is best practice for employers to discuss with their employees, regardless of age, their future aims and goals. This will help plan training and development needs. You should document any personal development discussion, hold the record for as long as there is a business need and provide a copy to the employee. See training your staff.
Age-Friendly Employer Pledge
As an employer, you can show you recognise the importance and value of older workers by committing to the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge. This initiative, run by the Centre for Ageing Better, outlines your commitment to promoting an age-friendly workplace through a number of actions.
Read further details on the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge.
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Five top tips to promote an age-diverse workforce
How employers can create a workplace that is inclusive to workers of all ages to give them a competitive advantage in recruitment and retention.
Research shows that businesses that promote an age-diverse workplace can benefit in many ways. Age diversity improves performance and productivity, reduces employee turnover, helps to drive innovation, and promotes stability.
Tips to create an age-inclusive workplace
We have outlined five top tips to help you create a workplace environment and culture where workers of all ages can feel welcomed, valued, and supported. These tips are especially helpful for older workers who may feel underrepresented and sometimes overlooked in the workplace.
1. Recruit from all age ranges
Develop an age-inclusive recruitment strategy to attract job applicants from all age ranges. To encourage older workers to apply for job vacancies, consider the language in your job descriptions and advertisements to avoid age bias. If you are an age-inclusive employer, promote this as part of your recruitment drive. Advertise your job vacancies across various media and digital channels to reach applicants from a diverse range of ages.
Examine the benefits package your organisation offers to attract job applicants and look at ways in which you could attract older workers, eg, offering flexible or part-time work. You should also take steps to ensure that staff are aware of how best to reduce bias and avoid discrimination throughout the recruitment process. See recruiting older workers.
2. Develop workplace policies promoting age-inclusiveness
Assess your current workplace policies on whether they help to promote age-inclusiveness. Adapt and enhance those existing policies where required. Identify gaps and determine if there are new policies that you could introduce to combat age discrimination and promote age-inclusiveness in your workplace.
Communicate and promote age-inclusiveness as part of your equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) strategy to make sure your staff and potential recruits are aware of the steps you are taking as an organisation to welcome people of all ages.
3. Identify and offer support on issues specific to older workers
Consider and offer help on issues that are specific to older workers, such as:
- health, eg, menopause or reduced mobility;
- finance, eg, pensions and planning for retirement;
- caring responsibilities, eg, responsibility for an elderly parent or relative.
The best way to understand the issues facing your workers is to ask them. Create a staff forum or working group and get employees involved from a diverse range of ages in identifying and providing solutions to key challenges.
There are several organisations that provide guidance and advice to older people - you could provide signposts to this information, perhaps through a dedicated organisational intranet page.
4. Create an environment for shared learning
Older workers usually have a wealth of knowledge and experience. Provide an environment and culture that encourages knowledge and learning exchanges between workers in your organisation of different ages and varying levels of experience. This will ensure that vital knowledge and experience are not lost when older workers retire, but are transferred to younger and newer staff.
Provide opportunities for older and younger workers to interact and mix, eg, by building mixed-age teams and hosting age-inclusive social events. See training methods to fit your business.
5. Offer training and development opportunities that appeal to workers of all ages
Provide training and development opportunities that are attractive and open to workers of all ages. Consider that older workers may want to retrain on new technologies and processes that have been introduced into your organisation. Ensure that any development opportunities don't have any barriers that would prevent older workers from applying. See training your staff.
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Advantages of employing and retaining older workers
In this guide:
Employment rights of older workers
How employers can meet the legal rights of older workers including retirement age, age discrimination, and caring for dependants including grandchildren and parents.
Employers should fully understand employment rights and the role of equal opportunities, practices, and procedures relating to older workers.
Recent years have seen the introduction of various policy reforms to encourage the participation and retention of older workers in employment.
How to prevent workplace age discrimination
It is generally unlawful for an employer to discriminate on the grounds of age - ie, to treat individuals of any age less favourably than others on the grounds of age.
Recruitment
To avoid age discrimination, you should check that your recruitment process is non-discriminatory. For example, aim to place advertisements in publications read by a range of age groups. Also, avoid using terms that imply a particular age group, such as 'mature', 'enthusiastic', 'highly experienced', or 'recent graduate'. See avoid discrimination when recruiting staff.
Redundancies
If you are making employees redundant, you should similarly ensure that you base procedures on business needs rather than age. For example, it could be discriminatory to select employees for redundancy solely based on when they joined your business - 'last in, first out'. See redundancy and lay-offs.
When age discrimination may be lawful
There are limited circumstances when age discrimination can be lawful. To read about age discrimination exceptions and examples, see age discrimination.
Develop age-related work policies
Age discrimination can affect workers of any age. Having an equal opportunities policy that explicitly mentions age could indicate your commitment to the fair treatment of and eliminating discrimination against workers of all ages. See equality and diversity workplace policies.
Training
You should also ensure appropriate training is provided to your managers and staff on workplace discrimination, with some focus on age discrimination. This will help to increase awareness of age discrimination and how to minimise it in the workplace.
Understand the rules for retirement
The statutory default retirement age in the UK was abolished in 2011. As a result, if an employer forces an employee to retire once they reach a certain age, that act would be direct age discrimination and is likely to be unlawful unless it can be objectively justified. See retirement ages and procedures.
An employee can retire voluntarily at a time that they choose and beyond their state pension age unless the job has a lawfully justified 'compulsory retirement age'. The reasons for compulsory retirement may include exceptional circumstances such as:
- the job requires certain physical abilities (eg, in the construction industry)
- the job has an age limit set by law (eg, commercial pilots)
Employers who set compulsory retirement age rules, also known as Employer Justified Retirement Ages (EJRA), must consider whether that retirement age can be objectively justified, for example, in terms of workforce planning, or the health and safety of individual employees, their colleagues, and the public. In addition, an employer will need to demonstrate that the compulsory retirement age is objectively justified; ie, that it is a proportionate means of achieving that objective.
See the Equality Commission's guide for employers on age discrimination in Northern Ireland (PDF, 1.53MB).
Provide flexible working arrangements
Older workers may prefer flexible working arrangements.
Every employee has the statutory right to request flexible working for any reason after 26 weeks of employment. Employees can make one flexible working application every 12 months. A year runs from the date the most recent application was made. If you accept an employee's flexible working request, this will be a permanent change to their contractual terms and conditions unless you agree otherwise.
There are different forms of flexible working, for example, homeworking, temporary contracts, part-time, flexitime, or job sharing. Employers should ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to staff of all ages. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Caring for grandchildren and dependants: rights at work
Apart from the right to request flexible working arrangements, outlined above, under employment law in Northern Ireland grandparents, generally, have no other statutory rights to paid or unpaid time off to care for their grandchildren.
Grandparents may have the right to parental leave in limited circumstances if they have adopted the child or have a residence order made in their favour giving them parental responsibility. Employees must have one year's employment service, and parental leave can be taken up until the child's 18th birthday. See parental leave entitlement.
All employees have the right to reasonable time off for dependants to deal with emergencies or unforeseen matters involving someone who depends on them for caring responsibilities. This could be to deal with a breakdown in childcare or if a child falls ill. It could also be used to deal with caring responsibilities for older relatives or parents who may be ill. Employers do not have to pay for this time off, but some employers may under the terms and conditions of employment. See time off to deal with emergencies involving dependants.
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Advantages of employing and retaining older workers
Key benefits that employing and retaining older workers can bring to businesses.
There is a wide range of advantages that employing older workers can bring to your business, especially when you have a mix of different ages across your workforce.
Age-diversity benefits
Age diversity can bring many benefits to your business. Employers can reap the benefits of experience and loyalty that older workers can bring. There may also be broader advantages for others within the workplace.
Working in an age-diverse team brings benefits, including fresh perspectives, knowledge-sharing, and improved problem-solving. Where there is an age-diverse workforce, businesses have seen advantages including:
- increased productivity
- skills diversity
- better inclusiveness
- opportunities for mentorships
- improved staff retention
Benefits of employing older workers
Employing older workers can bring the following advantages to your business:
Experience and knowledge
Older workers bring life experience as well as accumulated knowledge from many years of working. You can tap into these strengths to help overcome workplace challenges and identify business opportunities.
New ideas and opportunities
If you are developing new ideas or searching for new business opportunities, an age-diverse workforce can prove helpful in weighing up the potential risks and benefits. Such foresight can help suggest new ideas or efficient ways of doing things.
Focused workers
Older workers are likely to analyse business tasks from a measured or calculated point of view rather than from an emotional one. This, in turn, can lead to fewer mistakes.
Problem-solving
Older workers with their experience, maturity, and often calming influence can help solve problems that may arise in the workplace, whether they are difficult business decisions or workplace conflict.
Positive role models
Older workers can be a positive influence on younger or less experienced workers. They often perform well in training or mentoring roles.
Resilience
Older workers are likely to have experienced difficult times throughout their working life, and so are often resilient when faced with a business challenge.
Commitment
On average, older workers report higher job satisfaction and are less likely to switch jobs. A reduction in staff turnover can create stability in the workforce and is more cost-effective than recruiting and retraining new staff. See control staff turnover.
Adaptability
Older workers are likely to have experienced frequent changes during their working careers, so they often adapt well to the need for new skills and changing technology.
Responsibility
Older workers are inclined to take on roles that require a level of responsibility, such as management positions, and are often willing to accept accountability if things go wrong.
Customer service
Older workers usually place value on customer service, which can help you similarly maintain a focus on providing quality service.
Consider the challenges too
Despite the many advantages, there are some possible challenges for employers managing older workers, as with staff of any age. See ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers.
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Ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers
How employers can identify and address the challenges of an ageing workforce.
The steps for effectively managing older workers are the same as for staff of any age. However, there are some issues that affect older workers in particular. It is important to understand the challenges that older employees might face and take steps to support them.
Challenges for older workers
Challenges for older workers can include:
Age discrimination
There are often stereotypes of older workers being less agile, technophobic, more prone to sickness absence, and resistant to change. Read how to avoid age discrimination.
Part-time or flexible working requirements
Part-time work and the demand for flexible working are more common among older workers than among younger age groups. Ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to all staff. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working.
See flexible working for over 50s - a toolkit for employers (PDF, 3.63MB).
Physical or mental challenges of job roles
Employers must make reasonable adjustments to ensure workers with disabilities, such as physical or mental health conditions, aren't substantially disadvantaged when doing their jobs. See improve access and use of facilities for disabled employees and managing and supporting employees with mental ill health.
Absenteeism
Promoting staff wellbeing and healthier lifestyles can also help reduce staff absences due to sickness. Employers should address this by asking workers if there is anything they can do to support them, so they are happier in the workplace and absences are minimised.
Caring responsibilities
Older workers often have caring responsibilities, eg, for elderly parents. This can cause stress and worry about the health and wellbeing of a close relative. The worker may also need to take time off work to help care for a relative, eg, to take an elderly parent to a hospital appointment. Employees with elder care responsibilities should be offered the same flexibility as those with childcare responsibilities.
Retirement age
The statutory default retirement age has been abolished, so most people can now work for as long as they want to. If an employee chooses to work longer, they can't be discriminated against unlawfully on the grounds of age. Employers should support staff with planning their future career development goals and the transition from employment to retirement when an employee decides to retire. See training your staff and providing support for a retiring employee.
Older women and the menopause
Health issues affect all workers, but some can be overlooked by employers. While many women may go through menopause with relatively little discomfort, many others report a range of symptoms such as hot flushes, irritability, sleep disturbances, fatigue, depression, impaired memory, and anxiety. Menopause awareness amongst managers and the option of flexible working may help female staff. See menopause in the workplace: employer guidance.
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Recruiting older workers
How employers can recruit fairly and avoid age discrimination when taking on new staff including older workers.
You must not discriminate on the grounds of age when recruiting new staff. The Employment Equality (Age) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 prohibit all employers, regardless of size, from subjecting job applicants and employees, including contract workers and former employees, to age discrimination and harassment. See more on age discrimination.
Age-neutral job adverts
You should use age-neutral language when advertising for job roles. References such as 'young', 'energetic', or 'recently qualified' are best avoided as this would discriminate against older workers. You could also consider using a strapline in job adverts to welcome all-age applicants, ensuring your organisation overcomes any unconscious bias or discrimination by tracking age profiles of successful candidates and potentially offering apprenticeships for older workers as well as the young.
During recruitment, you should evaluate candidates according to values, behaviours, competencies demonstrated, and their ability to do the job. See advertising a job and interviewing candidates.
Experience
Requirements when it comes to experience should be described in terms of type or depth of experience rather than a simple number of years of experience.
Qualifications
Applicants should only be asked for qualifications that are necessary for a job role. Looking for graduates might not be necessary for a particular role and may discriminate against older workers.
Interviewing
Avoid unscripted interviews, as this can often lead to discrimination when panel members ask inappropriate questions. You should ask the same questions to all candidates to ensure a fair, even, and unbiased interview process. Prepare the questions in advance and identify points that you would like candidates to address when answering their interview questions.
Promote your age-positive workplace
You can also promote your business as an age-positive employer. You could highlight the diverse age range in your workforce by featuring various members of staff through your company website or social media channels. Staff could share messages on why they enjoy working for you, and if there is any specific workplace support that you provide for them.
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Retain and retrain older workers
How employers can make efforts to retain staff to secure key skills and experience and how retraining older workers may be beneficial.
As an employer, you should take action to create a working environment that enables workers to develop and fulfil their potential and encourages them to stay. Recruiting and training new staff can be costly. Also, valuable skills and experience may be lost when an employee leaves, so you should make every effort to retain staff.
Retain and transfer key skills
You should plan effectively for an ageing workforce. Consider carrying out an age and skills audit to ensure you are making the most of staff knowledge and skills. This planning will help you identify your skills needs when there are future staff changes.
You should focus on how you facilitate the transfer of knowledge to younger staff, for example, through mentoring or getting older workers involved in planning and leading training and development programmes.
Retain existing workers
By providing workplace flexibility, you are considering the needs of all your workers.
Employers should consider the introduction of age-friendly workplace policies in areas that affect older workers, such as:
Flexible working
This can help to accommodate caring responsibilities, health considerations or changing the nature of a job role to lessen its physical demands. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Phased retirement
See retirement ages and procedures.
Family care leave
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
Career gap breaks
Offer career breaks for staff so that they can deal with family responsibilities or pursue other interests with the security of returning to their job after a certain period of time.
Health and wellbeing
You could look at ways in which you promote healthy ageing in the workplace. For example, you could introduce fitness programmes at lunchtime or awareness sessions around healthy eating. See staff health and wellbeing.
Financial and retirement planning support
Employers can offer older staff the opportunity to understand their financial requirements for retirement. The age friendly training service from Age NI offers an opportunity for individuals aged 50+ to reflect and take a look at interrelated areas of their lives and provide an overview of three key areas:
- financial wellbeing
- health and wellbeing
- career support
Employers can request group sessions to be delivered for their staff.
Alumni programmes
Rather than lose contact with workers when they leave your employment, you could look at creating an alumni programme that enables you to get insight into your business's successes and failures. You can also turn former employees into engaged brand ambassadors who can help promote your business as an ideal place to work.
Staff training and retraining
Retraining existing staff can be a cost-effective way of developing your existing talent pool and accessing new skills that your business requires. Staff retraining can also help reduce staff turnover as workers undergoing training will feel more valued, confident and motivated to do their job.
Age must not be a barrier to training opportunities - no one is ever too old to learn new skills. Older workers tend to be loyal and are less likely to change jobs frequently, so your business is likely to see the benefits of investing in training before the employee retires.
It is best practice for employers to discuss with their employees, regardless of age, their future aims and goals. This will help plan training and development needs. You should document any personal development discussion, hold the record for as long as there is a business need and provide a copy to the employee. See training your staff.
Age-Friendly Employer Pledge
As an employer, you can show you recognise the importance and value of older workers by committing to the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge. This initiative, run by the Centre for Ageing Better, outlines your commitment to promoting an age-friendly workplace through a number of actions.
Read further details on the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge.
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Five top tips to promote an age-diverse workforce
How employers can create a workplace that is inclusive to workers of all ages to give them a competitive advantage in recruitment and retention.
Research shows that businesses that promote an age-diverse workplace can benefit in many ways. Age diversity improves performance and productivity, reduces employee turnover, helps to drive innovation, and promotes stability.
Tips to create an age-inclusive workplace
We have outlined five top tips to help you create a workplace environment and culture where workers of all ages can feel welcomed, valued, and supported. These tips are especially helpful for older workers who may feel underrepresented and sometimes overlooked in the workplace.
1. Recruit from all age ranges
Develop an age-inclusive recruitment strategy to attract job applicants from all age ranges. To encourage older workers to apply for job vacancies, consider the language in your job descriptions and advertisements to avoid age bias. If you are an age-inclusive employer, promote this as part of your recruitment drive. Advertise your job vacancies across various media and digital channels to reach applicants from a diverse range of ages.
Examine the benefits package your organisation offers to attract job applicants and look at ways in which you could attract older workers, eg, offering flexible or part-time work. You should also take steps to ensure that staff are aware of how best to reduce bias and avoid discrimination throughout the recruitment process. See recruiting older workers.
2. Develop workplace policies promoting age-inclusiveness
Assess your current workplace policies on whether they help to promote age-inclusiveness. Adapt and enhance those existing policies where required. Identify gaps and determine if there are new policies that you could introduce to combat age discrimination and promote age-inclusiveness in your workplace.
Communicate and promote age-inclusiveness as part of your equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) strategy to make sure your staff and potential recruits are aware of the steps you are taking as an organisation to welcome people of all ages.
3. Identify and offer support on issues specific to older workers
Consider and offer help on issues that are specific to older workers, such as:
- health, eg, menopause or reduced mobility;
- finance, eg, pensions and planning for retirement;
- caring responsibilities, eg, responsibility for an elderly parent or relative.
The best way to understand the issues facing your workers is to ask them. Create a staff forum or working group and get employees involved from a diverse range of ages in identifying and providing solutions to key challenges.
There are several organisations that provide guidance and advice to older people - you could provide signposts to this information, perhaps through a dedicated organisational intranet page.
4. Create an environment for shared learning
Older workers usually have a wealth of knowledge and experience. Provide an environment and culture that encourages knowledge and learning exchanges between workers in your organisation of different ages and varying levels of experience. This will ensure that vital knowledge and experience are not lost when older workers retire, but are transferred to younger and newer staff.
Provide opportunities for older and younger workers to interact and mix, eg, by building mixed-age teams and hosting age-inclusive social events. See training methods to fit your business.
5. Offer training and development opportunities that appeal to workers of all ages
Provide training and development opportunities that are attractive and open to workers of all ages. Consider that older workers may want to retrain on new technologies and processes that have been introduced into your organisation. Ensure that any development opportunities don't have any barriers that would prevent older workers from applying. See training your staff.
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Employment rights of older workers
In this guide:
Employment rights of older workers
How employers can meet the legal rights of older workers including retirement age, age discrimination, and caring for dependants including grandchildren and parents.
Employers should fully understand employment rights and the role of equal opportunities, practices, and procedures relating to older workers.
Recent years have seen the introduction of various policy reforms to encourage the participation and retention of older workers in employment.
How to prevent workplace age discrimination
It is generally unlawful for an employer to discriminate on the grounds of age - ie, to treat individuals of any age less favourably than others on the grounds of age.
Recruitment
To avoid age discrimination, you should check that your recruitment process is non-discriminatory. For example, aim to place advertisements in publications read by a range of age groups. Also, avoid using terms that imply a particular age group, such as 'mature', 'enthusiastic', 'highly experienced', or 'recent graduate'. See avoid discrimination when recruiting staff.
Redundancies
If you are making employees redundant, you should similarly ensure that you base procedures on business needs rather than age. For example, it could be discriminatory to select employees for redundancy solely based on when they joined your business - 'last in, first out'. See redundancy and lay-offs.
When age discrimination may be lawful
There are limited circumstances when age discrimination can be lawful. To read about age discrimination exceptions and examples, see age discrimination.
Develop age-related work policies
Age discrimination can affect workers of any age. Having an equal opportunities policy that explicitly mentions age could indicate your commitment to the fair treatment of and eliminating discrimination against workers of all ages. See equality and diversity workplace policies.
Training
You should also ensure appropriate training is provided to your managers and staff on workplace discrimination, with some focus on age discrimination. This will help to increase awareness of age discrimination and how to minimise it in the workplace.
Understand the rules for retirement
The statutory default retirement age in the UK was abolished in 2011. As a result, if an employer forces an employee to retire once they reach a certain age, that act would be direct age discrimination and is likely to be unlawful unless it can be objectively justified. See retirement ages and procedures.
An employee can retire voluntarily at a time that they choose and beyond their state pension age unless the job has a lawfully justified 'compulsory retirement age'. The reasons for compulsory retirement may include exceptional circumstances such as:
- the job requires certain physical abilities (eg, in the construction industry)
- the job has an age limit set by law (eg, commercial pilots)
Employers who set compulsory retirement age rules, also known as Employer Justified Retirement Ages (EJRA), must consider whether that retirement age can be objectively justified, for example, in terms of workforce planning, or the health and safety of individual employees, their colleagues, and the public. In addition, an employer will need to demonstrate that the compulsory retirement age is objectively justified; ie, that it is a proportionate means of achieving that objective.
See the Equality Commission's guide for employers on age discrimination in Northern Ireland (PDF, 1.53MB).
Provide flexible working arrangements
Older workers may prefer flexible working arrangements.
Every employee has the statutory right to request flexible working for any reason after 26 weeks of employment. Employees can make one flexible working application every 12 months. A year runs from the date the most recent application was made. If you accept an employee's flexible working request, this will be a permanent change to their contractual terms and conditions unless you agree otherwise.
There are different forms of flexible working, for example, homeworking, temporary contracts, part-time, flexitime, or job sharing. Employers should ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to staff of all ages. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Caring for grandchildren and dependants: rights at work
Apart from the right to request flexible working arrangements, outlined above, under employment law in Northern Ireland grandparents, generally, have no other statutory rights to paid or unpaid time off to care for their grandchildren.
Grandparents may have the right to parental leave in limited circumstances if they have adopted the child or have a residence order made in their favour giving them parental responsibility. Employees must have one year's employment service, and parental leave can be taken up until the child's 18th birthday. See parental leave entitlement.
All employees have the right to reasonable time off for dependants to deal with emergencies or unforeseen matters involving someone who depends on them for caring responsibilities. This could be to deal with a breakdown in childcare or if a child falls ill. It could also be used to deal with caring responsibilities for older relatives or parents who may be ill. Employers do not have to pay for this time off, but some employers may under the terms and conditions of employment. See time off to deal with emergencies involving dependants.
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Advantages of employing and retaining older workers
Key benefits that employing and retaining older workers can bring to businesses.
There is a wide range of advantages that employing older workers can bring to your business, especially when you have a mix of different ages across your workforce.
Age-diversity benefits
Age diversity can bring many benefits to your business. Employers can reap the benefits of experience and loyalty that older workers can bring. There may also be broader advantages for others within the workplace.
Working in an age-diverse team brings benefits, including fresh perspectives, knowledge-sharing, and improved problem-solving. Where there is an age-diverse workforce, businesses have seen advantages including:
- increased productivity
- skills diversity
- better inclusiveness
- opportunities for mentorships
- improved staff retention
Benefits of employing older workers
Employing older workers can bring the following advantages to your business:
Experience and knowledge
Older workers bring life experience as well as accumulated knowledge from many years of working. You can tap into these strengths to help overcome workplace challenges and identify business opportunities.
New ideas and opportunities
If you are developing new ideas or searching for new business opportunities, an age-diverse workforce can prove helpful in weighing up the potential risks and benefits. Such foresight can help suggest new ideas or efficient ways of doing things.
Focused workers
Older workers are likely to analyse business tasks from a measured or calculated point of view rather than from an emotional one. This, in turn, can lead to fewer mistakes.
Problem-solving
Older workers with their experience, maturity, and often calming influence can help solve problems that may arise in the workplace, whether they are difficult business decisions or workplace conflict.
Positive role models
Older workers can be a positive influence on younger or less experienced workers. They often perform well in training or mentoring roles.
Resilience
Older workers are likely to have experienced difficult times throughout their working life, and so are often resilient when faced with a business challenge.
Commitment
On average, older workers report higher job satisfaction and are less likely to switch jobs. A reduction in staff turnover can create stability in the workforce and is more cost-effective than recruiting and retraining new staff. See control staff turnover.
Adaptability
Older workers are likely to have experienced frequent changes during their working careers, so they often adapt well to the need for new skills and changing technology.
Responsibility
Older workers are inclined to take on roles that require a level of responsibility, such as management positions, and are often willing to accept accountability if things go wrong.
Customer service
Older workers usually place value on customer service, which can help you similarly maintain a focus on providing quality service.
Consider the challenges too
Despite the many advantages, there are some possible challenges for employers managing older workers, as with staff of any age. See ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers.
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Ageing workforce: challenges for staff and employers
How employers can identify and address the challenges of an ageing workforce.
The steps for effectively managing older workers are the same as for staff of any age. However, there are some issues that affect older workers in particular. It is important to understand the challenges that older employees might face and take steps to support them.
Challenges for older workers
Challenges for older workers can include:
Age discrimination
There are often stereotypes of older workers being less agile, technophobic, more prone to sickness absence, and resistant to change. Read how to avoid age discrimination.
Part-time or flexible working requirements
Part-time work and the demand for flexible working are more common among older workers than among younger age groups. Ensure the equal promotion of flexible working to all staff. Develop clear procedures and criteria for how to apply for flexible working.
See flexible working for over 50s - a toolkit for employers (PDF, 3.63MB).
Physical or mental challenges of job roles
Employers must make reasonable adjustments to ensure workers with disabilities, such as physical or mental health conditions, aren't substantially disadvantaged when doing their jobs. See improve access and use of facilities for disabled employees and managing and supporting employees with mental ill health.
Absenteeism
Promoting staff wellbeing and healthier lifestyles can also help reduce staff absences due to sickness. Employers should address this by asking workers if there is anything they can do to support them, so they are happier in the workplace and absences are minimised.
Caring responsibilities
Older workers often have caring responsibilities, eg, for elderly parents. This can cause stress and worry about the health and wellbeing of a close relative. The worker may also need to take time off work to help care for a relative, eg, to take an elderly parent to a hospital appointment. Employees with elder care responsibilities should be offered the same flexibility as those with childcare responsibilities.
Retirement age
The statutory default retirement age has been abolished, so most people can now work for as long as they want to. If an employee chooses to work longer, they can't be discriminated against unlawfully on the grounds of age. Employers should support staff with planning their future career development goals and the transition from employment to retirement when an employee decides to retire. See training your staff and providing support for a retiring employee.
Older women and the menopause
Health issues affect all workers, but some can be overlooked by employers. While many women may go through menopause with relatively little discomfort, many others report a range of symptoms such as hot flushes, irritability, sleep disturbances, fatigue, depression, impaired memory, and anxiety. Menopause awareness amongst managers and the option of flexible working may help female staff. See menopause in the workplace: employer guidance.
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Recruiting older workers
How employers can recruit fairly and avoid age discrimination when taking on new staff including older workers.
You must not discriminate on the grounds of age when recruiting new staff. The Employment Equality (Age) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2006 prohibit all employers, regardless of size, from subjecting job applicants and employees, including contract workers and former employees, to age discrimination and harassment. See more on age discrimination.
Age-neutral job adverts
You should use age-neutral language when advertising for job roles. References such as 'young', 'energetic', or 'recently qualified' are best avoided as this would discriminate against older workers. You could also consider using a strapline in job adverts to welcome all-age applicants, ensuring your organisation overcomes any unconscious bias or discrimination by tracking age profiles of successful candidates and potentially offering apprenticeships for older workers as well as the young.
During recruitment, you should evaluate candidates according to values, behaviours, competencies demonstrated, and their ability to do the job. See advertising a job and interviewing candidates.
Experience
Requirements when it comes to experience should be described in terms of type or depth of experience rather than a simple number of years of experience.
Qualifications
Applicants should only be asked for qualifications that are necessary for a job role. Looking for graduates might not be necessary for a particular role and may discriminate against older workers.
Interviewing
Avoid unscripted interviews, as this can often lead to discrimination when panel members ask inappropriate questions. You should ask the same questions to all candidates to ensure a fair, even, and unbiased interview process. Prepare the questions in advance and identify points that you would like candidates to address when answering their interview questions.
Promote your age-positive workplace
You can also promote your business as an age-positive employer. You could highlight the diverse age range in your workforce by featuring various members of staff through your company website or social media channels. Staff could share messages on why they enjoy working for you, and if there is any specific workplace support that you provide for them.
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Retain and retrain older workers
How employers can make efforts to retain staff to secure key skills and experience and how retraining older workers may be beneficial.
As an employer, you should take action to create a working environment that enables workers to develop and fulfil their potential and encourages them to stay. Recruiting and training new staff can be costly. Also, valuable skills and experience may be lost when an employee leaves, so you should make every effort to retain staff.
Retain and transfer key skills
You should plan effectively for an ageing workforce. Consider carrying out an age and skills audit to ensure you are making the most of staff knowledge and skills. This planning will help you identify your skills needs when there are future staff changes.
You should focus on how you facilitate the transfer of knowledge to younger staff, for example, through mentoring or getting older workers involved in planning and leading training and development programmes.
Retain existing workers
By providing workplace flexibility, you are considering the needs of all your workers.
Employers should consider the introduction of age-friendly workplace policies in areas that affect older workers, such as:
Flexible working
This can help to accommodate caring responsibilities, health considerations or changing the nature of a job role to lessen its physical demands. See flexible working: the law and best practice.
Phased retirement
See retirement ages and procedures.
Family care leave
See parental leave and time off for dependants.
Career gap breaks
Offer career breaks for staff so that they can deal with family responsibilities or pursue other interests with the security of returning to their job after a certain period of time.
Health and wellbeing
You could look at ways in which you promote healthy ageing in the workplace. For example, you could introduce fitness programmes at lunchtime or awareness sessions around healthy eating. See staff health and wellbeing.
Financial and retirement planning support
Employers can offer older staff the opportunity to understand their financial requirements for retirement. The age friendly training service from Age NI offers an opportunity for individuals aged 50+ to reflect and take a look at interrelated areas of their lives and provide an overview of three key areas:
- financial wellbeing
- health and wellbeing
- career support
Employers can request group sessions to be delivered for their staff.
Alumni programmes
Rather than lose contact with workers when they leave your employment, you could look at creating an alumni programme that enables you to get insight into your business's successes and failures. You can also turn former employees into engaged brand ambassadors who can help promote your business as an ideal place to work.
Staff training and retraining
Retraining existing staff can be a cost-effective way of developing your existing talent pool and accessing new skills that your business requires. Staff retraining can also help reduce staff turnover as workers undergoing training will feel more valued, confident and motivated to do their job.
Age must not be a barrier to training opportunities - no one is ever too old to learn new skills. Older workers tend to be loyal and are less likely to change jobs frequently, so your business is likely to see the benefits of investing in training before the employee retires.
It is best practice for employers to discuss with their employees, regardless of age, their future aims and goals. This will help plan training and development needs. You should document any personal development discussion, hold the record for as long as there is a business need and provide a copy to the employee. See training your staff.
Age-Friendly Employer Pledge
As an employer, you can show you recognise the importance and value of older workers by committing to the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge. This initiative, run by the Centre for Ageing Better, outlines your commitment to promoting an age-friendly workplace through a number of actions.
Read further details on the Age-Friendly Employer Pledge.
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Five top tips to promote an age-diverse workforce
How employers can create a workplace that is inclusive to workers of all ages to give them a competitive advantage in recruitment and retention.
Research shows that businesses that promote an age-diverse workplace can benefit in many ways. Age diversity improves performance and productivity, reduces employee turnover, helps to drive innovation, and promotes stability.
Tips to create an age-inclusive workplace
We have outlined five top tips to help you create a workplace environment and culture where workers of all ages can feel welcomed, valued, and supported. These tips are especially helpful for older workers who may feel underrepresented and sometimes overlooked in the workplace.
1. Recruit from all age ranges
Develop an age-inclusive recruitment strategy to attract job applicants from all age ranges. To encourage older workers to apply for job vacancies, consider the language in your job descriptions and advertisements to avoid age bias. If you are an age-inclusive employer, promote this as part of your recruitment drive. Advertise your job vacancies across various media and digital channels to reach applicants from a diverse range of ages.
Examine the benefits package your organisation offers to attract job applicants and look at ways in which you could attract older workers, eg, offering flexible or part-time work. You should also take steps to ensure that staff are aware of how best to reduce bias and avoid discrimination throughout the recruitment process. See recruiting older workers.
2. Develop workplace policies promoting age-inclusiveness
Assess your current workplace policies on whether they help to promote age-inclusiveness. Adapt and enhance those existing policies where required. Identify gaps and determine if there are new policies that you could introduce to combat age discrimination and promote age-inclusiveness in your workplace.
Communicate and promote age-inclusiveness as part of your equality, diversity, and inclusion (EDI) strategy to make sure your staff and potential recruits are aware of the steps you are taking as an organisation to welcome people of all ages.
3. Identify and offer support on issues specific to older workers
Consider and offer help on issues that are specific to older workers, such as:
- health, eg, menopause or reduced mobility;
- finance, eg, pensions and planning for retirement;
- caring responsibilities, eg, responsibility for an elderly parent or relative.
The best way to understand the issues facing your workers is to ask them. Create a staff forum or working group and get employees involved from a diverse range of ages in identifying and providing solutions to key challenges.
There are several organisations that provide guidance and advice to older people - you could provide signposts to this information, perhaps through a dedicated organisational intranet page.
4. Create an environment for shared learning
Older workers usually have a wealth of knowledge and experience. Provide an environment and culture that encourages knowledge and learning exchanges between workers in your organisation of different ages and varying levels of experience. This will ensure that vital knowledge and experience are not lost when older workers retire, but are transferred to younger and newer staff.
Provide opportunities for older and younger workers to interact and mix, eg, by building mixed-age teams and hosting age-inclusive social events. See training methods to fit your business.
5. Offer training and development opportunities that appeal to workers of all ages
Provide training and development opportunities that are attractive and open to workers of all ages. Consider that older workers may want to retrain on new technologies and processes that have been introduced into your organisation. Ensure that any development opportunities don't have any barriers that would prevent older workers from applying. See training your staff.
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