4. Focusing on employee wellbeing
As inflation eases, HR professionals are hopeful that there will be less of a focus on pay and therefore on other areas of work, including environment, progression and benefits. Healthcare premiums have gone up significantly this year, so highlighting the greater investment by employers beyond pay in the total reward offering is important for employees to understand the value they are receiving from their work.
Hybrid working post-covid remains a key challenge. Employers are still asking whether they are getting the best productivity from their people. However, particularly in Construction and Property, family friendly policies are increasingly a priority to widen the pool of candidates that they are recruiting from.
Wellbeing is an acute issue in certain sectors. Where role compression has happened in the Residential Care sector, some employees do not want to be promoted from Carers to Senior Carers, because there is not much more remuneration available for the greater responsibility involved. However, the low staff levels are putting immense pressure on people, showing the impact that staff shortages can have on employee wellbeing.
5. Software is being used to harness better data insights
At Paydata, we always advise that if companies can take pay off of the table as an issue, employees can focus on the wider benefits and environment that can be accessed through their work which delivers value to them. Many people are reviewing their salary structures and ranges, alongside their benefits packages and looking at the technology that can inform what must be evidence-based frameworks. Automating systems for recruitment and payroll enables HR to focus on dealing with people directly, making their role more efficient.
Human Resources Information Systems are being widely investigated and adopted to manage data, particularly in the construction sector and in the Channel Islands. Workforce planning software is being used as part of people analytics, organising the insights from firm wide engagement surveys, identifying emerging talent, and tracking out of cycle pay increases. They are also being used to monitor data around diversity and inclusion – gender, LGBTQ, ethnicity and disability – which enables companies to harness the power of their data more effectively.
Many employers are looking at internal pay equity due to the EU Pay Transparency Directive that is being implemented in the EU. Ensuring pay parity exists is crucial for employers operating in the EU and those looking at whether this more robust system of reporting requirements will become a UK government priority.
Get in touch
We hope these key insights from across our HR Workshops help to inform your approach to HR challenges. Get in touch with us today to discuss these trends and themes and let us help you establish fair pay frameworks and underline the investment you are making in your employees.