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Building a Clear Path Forward

Building a Clear Path Forward In the field of human resources where regulations shift, best practices evolve, and certifications require ongoing education, continuous learning isn’t optional. It’s essential. While HR…

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Exploring Alternative Recruitment Pools

If you’ve spent time hiring in the last few years, you’ve probably noticed recruiting has become tougher. Job boards are crowded, competition is fierce, and finding the right candidate can…

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How Strong HR Impacts ROI

A commercial cleaning company knew they needed to differentiate themselves in a crowded marketplace. Instead of focusing the marketing budget on customer development and client recruitment, this owner committed to…

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HR Resolutions and Americhem: A Partnership for Success

HR Resolutions and Americhem International share a partnership that highlights the importance of effective human resources management in driving business success.   Americhem, a family-owned wholesale distributor headquartered in Middletown, PA,…

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Accidental HR℠ and Discipline

Uh Oh! Your employee is late, again! Or has left early too frequently, isn’t meeting production quotas or is not upholding company standards. There are so many possible reasons you may need to “discipline” an employee, but none of them are easy things to discuss.

One way to approach discipline is to use it as a coaching opportunity rather than punishment. Improvement is the ultimate goal, right? So think of it as a discussion on “how to” improve.

One of 3 things will happen when an employee is disciplined: the employee will improve, the employee will not improve and will be terminated or the employee will exit the organization on their own. In the end, these are all a WIN for your organization! You’ve either helped an employee grow or you’ve made room for a better fit.

Keep in mind that it is the performance not the person you are disciplining. When you have your discussion with the employee, have some specific examples ready of what’s NOT right. On the flip side, have some examples of what “right” is, so the employee knows what improvement will look like. Make sure the person absolutely understands what’s expected moving forward and what will happen if change doesn’t happen.

Once the conversation is done, agree to a follow up date and time to be sure the employee is on the right path to improving and growing in their position.

Do you need to talk to someone about how to handle a disciplinary situation at your work place? Give HR Resolutions a call and we will be happy to help!

Know of a friend or coworker who could benefit from this series? Forward this to them and have them reply to info@hrresolutions.com with ADD ME and have them tell us YOU sent them! You and they will both be entered into a drawing to win a $25 Amazon Gift card. Drawing will be held the first week of April!