With under a month to go to the start of the 2018 FIFA World Cup football managers will be hard at work preparing their teams for success in this summer’s tournament. At the same time employers should be taking the necessary precautions to manage their own staff and ensure provisions are in place to keep productivity levels high.
Some employers will choose to create a specific sporting events policy to manage staff during the World Cup. These policies will typically outline an organisations stance on a variety of issues including flexible working, internet usage, and general workplace conduct for the duration of the tournament.
Having a specific sporting events policy in place will help inform staff of any amendments to accepted working practices during the World Cup and provide employers with the framework required to discipline those who fail to comply. An added benefit of creating such a policy is that it can also be applied during similar events such as Wimbledon and the Olympic games.
With that being said simply having a policy in place is just the first step and for any policy to be truly successful it must be communicated effectively. Therefore, those who do choose to create a new policy ahead of the World Cup should ensure a copy of this is provided to staff well in advance, allowing them sufficient opportunity to review its contents and consider the practical implications prior to the tournaments kick- off.
Effective communication is equally important for those who choose to rely on pre-existing workplace polices to guide employee behaviour. In these instances, employers should consider holding informal meetings with the wider workforce to reiterate what is expected of them during the tournament, this will also give them an opportunity to announce if there will be any relaxing of existing policies to better accommodate employees during the World Cup.
Employers must also take care to ensure that the guidelines inscribed in workplace policies are enforced in a fair and consistent manner. Sporting events policies will commonly cover rules surrounding annual leave as employees may want time off to watch their favourite team’s matches, and normal procedures should apply, for example, being granted on a first come first serves basis. Additionally, staff may be permitted to watch certain matches in between shifts and during designated break periods and line managers must be vigilant to ensure they do not take advantage of this privilege.
It is clear that implementing a sporting events policy will be useful in maintaining workplace productivity ahead of the World Cup, particularly for organisations who have struggled to manage employees’ performance in the past. However, as well as simply creating the policy employers must adequately inform staff of any new policies and make concerted efforts to enforce the policy’s guidelines in a consistent manner.
Alan Price is Chief Executive Officer at BrightHR and Group Chief Operating Officer of Peninsula UK. He is a subject matter expert in employment law , human capital management, HR and business transformation.
We have loads of initiatives around including nice drop in lunches to discuss diversity issues and even a wellbeing group to address stress all run exclusively by a predominantly female HR department and HR recognises that workplace stress is predominantly a male problem
HR needs to bring in male friendly policy and recognise that many men relive stress in a different way to policy developed by women then perhaps we will see the major sporting events seen as a integral part of support for male stress in the workplace.
I suppose the real question looking at the make up of most HR Departments and the CIPD do they actually have the knowledge to support men.