Employer and Employee relations
Employer Employee Relations
In this blog I will be focusing
employer and employee relations and how these have let to the organisational
performance.
Employer-employee relations can be
describe as, the agreement made between employer and employee whereby the
former undertakes to pay for the work done. Also employees want a fair
treatment, security of employment, healthy and safe
working environment, good working conditions and the scope to raise and resolve
grievances. (Armstrong, 2012)
When an organisation hires new member
(employee) to their workforce new employer-employee relationship starts.
Because employer and employee should work closely and they necessarily develop
relationships. Managing these relationship is essential to the organisational
success and productivity. Unshakable relationships can lead to greater employee
happiness and it will greatly helps to increase productivity. (Schreiner,
2018)
Contemporary employer-employee
relations is seen as focusing on both individual and collective relationships
in the workplace, with an emphasis on stablish trust-based relationship with
employees. Good employee relations with greater level of employee engagement,
commitment and involvement can led to best outcomes as well as contribute to
employee's well-being. (CIPD)
Employer-employee relationships
begins with trust and expectation of both parties. Employer expect employee
will perform as what expect and employee expectation is, organisation will
ensure promises.
Armstrong (2017), discussed four
approaches to employee relations,
Adversarial-the employer decides what
organisation wants to do and expect employees are fitting to it.
Traditional- A good day to day
working environment.
Partnership – The organisation
involves employees in the accomplishment of organisational policies
Power sharing- employees are involved
in day to day working and making strategic decision.
“Employee relations are concerned
with managing the employment relationship and the psychological contract which
express certain assumptions and expectation about what employer and employee
have to offer and are willing to deliver ”. (Armstrong, 2012)
The initially relationship starts
with legal contract. But it doesn’t mean contractual relationship no longer
exist with out written contract. Employer and employee have legal rights and
obligations. Employers' obligation is duty to pay salary and remuneration,
provide safe work environment and treat in good faith. Employees' obligations
are honesty, loyalty, obedience and competence. (Armstrong, 2012)
Armstrong (2012) defined two types of
contract, namely transactional contracts and relational contracts. Transaction contracts are formal contract that have well explained/described
terms of exchange employer and employees. Relational contracts are informal
contract with more terms and refer to an open ended membership for the
organisation.
References
Armstrong,
M. (2012). A Handbook of HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT (12 ed.). London:
Kogen.
CIPD. (n.d.). Retrieved June 30, 2018, from Fundamentals of
employee relations:
https://www.cipd.co.uk/knowledge/fundamentals/relations/employees/factshetHYPERLINK
Schreiner, E. (2018, June 29). Chron. Retrieved June
30, 2018, from Employer Employee relationship:
http://smallbusiness.chron.com/employeremployee-relationship-16737.html
Well written article . Good Job . Could have used few more references though.
ReplyDeleteGood flow, and structure, language style is good, intext referencing and references meet LMU standards'
ReplyDeletePlease get your blogs peer reviewed
DeleteAll are latest references, good job, keep it up,
ReplyDeleteGood flow and rich content, well done my friend
ReplyDeleteGood referencing keep it up.
ReplyDelete