No company is too small for HR
Think because you're a small or midsize organization - with 50 or fewer employees - you don’t need someone overseeing human resources? Think again.
With all the federal, not to
mention state or local, laws that companies are required to follow, you need
someone — an internal HR professional or an external HR consultant — at the
helm ensuring your company is minimizing risks in administering HR programs.
Did you know:
- All employers must complete
I-9 forms for new hires?
- There are specific retention
requirements when an employee terminates?
- If you have three or more
employees, you must carry workers’ compensation?
- A company can’t arbitrarily
determine whether an employee is exempt from overtime because you don’t want to
pay overtime for hours worked beyond 40 in the workweek?
- Many companies have a
military leave policy, think they’re in compliance, but aren’t following the
regulations under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act
because they didn’t know they needed to?
Unfortunately, ignorance is
not an excuse. If the individual responsible for HR functions doesn’t have an
HR background, there are many unintentional mistakes that could occur. The
importance of training your supervisors can’t be stressed enough. The lack of
skilled HR staff might not only cause your company to pay out dollars for
claims that could have been avoided, it may result in poor hiring decisions.
And if someone turns out to be a bad hire but is still allowed to continue
working — even though performance isn’t up to standard — it brings morale down
for others and can trigger good workers to leave.
In addition, if your
organization fails to conduct thorough reference, credit and criminal
background checks, you could potentially be setting yourself up for problems.
According to a Society for Human Resources Management white paper — “Why Small
and Medium-Sized Organizations Really Do Need an HR Function” — a survey
conducted over the course of six months by InfoLink Screening Services
discovered that 8.3 percent of all job applicants had criminal records; 3.3
tested positive for illegal drugs and 26.4 percent had discrepancies in their
work history.
An HR staff member or
consultant also helps determine when it’s OK to terminate an employee after
appropriate counseling, warnings and documentation has been completed. Some
companies use the term “probationary period,” which leads employees to think
after that timeframe they can only be terminated for cause.
Other organizations believe “at-will” employment (termination of an employee
for any or no reason) gives them carte blanche, but the truth is there are
times you can’t use an at-will principle. HR staff can ensure proper steps have
been taken to minimize possible lawsuits and manage the introductory period for
new hires — holding supervisors accountable for determining, early on, whether
an employee is going to be successful or should be terminated.
Handbooks are a vital tool
in helping employees understand company policies and procedures, standards and
expectations and rules they’re expected to follow. Mistakenly, many small
organizations believe it’s OK to borrow or cut-and-paste a handbook from
Internet resources. This can create major issues especially if your company is
located in multiple states. If supervisors administer policies inconsistently,
employees may take legal action if they feel they’re being treated unfairly.
Since employees typically
represent 20 percent to 30 percent of operating expenses; it’s good business to
consider an experienced internal or external HR professional. They can manage
assets and minimize liabilities and incurred costs for non-compliance or
lawsuits — not to mention improve productivity and profitability by hiring
correctly and retaining properly.
Kay Robinson is a director
with RSM McGladrey. For more information, contact her at kay.robinson@rsmi.com.