Mothers ‘failing to take advantage of flexible working’

-

Many women in the UK are not taking advantage of flexible working opportunities because they are failing to ask their bosses, it has been found.

According to a study undertaken by WorkingMums.co.uk, although 83 per cent of mothers wanted an employer’s acceptance of flexible working upon their return from maternity leave, only 53 per cent had brought up the issue with managers.

This is despite the fact that 57 per cent of mothers who discussed such working with their employers had either got what they wanted or had come to a compromise.

Meanwhile, more than 72 per cent felt that a lack of appropriate and available flexible jobs is the biggest barrier to returning to work after having children.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

“There remains a large number of women who continue to be unaware of their rights to work flexibly or unable to discuss this with their employers,” stated Gillian Nissim, founder of WorkingMums.co.uk.

Earlier this year, Caroline Waters, director of employment policy at BT, stated that putting in place flexible working practices allows firms to attract and retain the best personnel.

Latest news

Martin Johnson: Why the Employment Rights Act marks the end of informal management

It’s crucial that organisations quickly realise the Employment Rights Act isn’t solely a legal change. In effect, it marks the end of informal management.

Unpaid wage claims ‘hit eight-year high’ as business failures rise

Rising insolvencies are leaving growing numbers of workers unpaid as HR teams face mounting legal risks around rushed redundancies and delayed wages.

Employers urged to rethink race for chief AI officers

Companies are being warned against rushing to appoint chief AI officers before establishing the systems and leadership structures needed to support them.

Building workforce skills for AI performance

AI is changing the way work gets done—but most organisations still lack a clear plan for building AI-ready teams.
- Advertisement -

UK risks ‘lost generation’ as youth unemployment crisis deepens

A major review warns that Britain could face a “lost generation” as youth unemployment and economic inactivity continue rising.

‘Delighted to be wrong about jobs apocalypse’, says OpenAI boss Altman

The OpenAI chief executive said human interaction remained far harder to replace than many technology leaders first predicted.

Must read

Geoffrey Matthews: Ten signs that your engagement survey follow-up risks being a stumble, not a sprint

Geoffrey Matthews will be speaking at the Employee Engagement Summit in...

Chris Weaver: Just what is the employment status of Uber drivers?

Over the summer it was reported that the GMB trade union was launching legal action against Uber over its treatment of drivers who are GMB members.  It claims that drivers working for Uber are in fact "employees" or "workers" and not, as Uber asserts, self-employed "business partners".  If the employment tribunal agrees that the drivers are workers or employees then Uber will face substantial liabilities for failing to grant them basic rights under employment law.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you