Absolute Works

Absolute Works HR & Employment Law advice and support for SMEs Specialising in bespoke HR support & outsourcing solutions for small/medium sized businesses.

Retained Services, Recruitment, Coaching, Projects & Audits

You check your financials every month. But when was the last time you checked how your people are actually doing?Most bu...
02/06/2026

You check your financials every month. But when was the last time you checked how your people are actually doing?

Most business owners don't have a clear picture of where they stand on the people side of things. Not because they don't care but because there's no quick way to take stock.

So, we've put together a simple mid-year health check you can do in under 60 seconds.

Rate yourself Green, Amber or Red on each one.

How did you score? πŸ‘‡

How much time do you spend managing holiday requests?If you don't have a clear process, it probably feels like more than...
29/05/2026

How much time do you spend managing holiday requests?

If you don't have a clear process, it probably feels like more than it should. It's always down to you to scramble for cover and manage who should be working when.

Get it wrong and it can quickly become part of a bigger grievance. What feels like a minor scheduling issue can escalate when an employee feels that they've been treated unfairly.

But don't worry. A few simple changes can take the hassle out of it.

Below are 5 ways to get your holiday process working properly.

Take a look and if you need help with your holiday requests, we're always here to help.

Need HR support but not sure which option actually makes sense for your business?HR support isn't a one size fits all. T...
28/05/2026

Need HR support but not sure which option actually makes sense for your business?

HR support isn't a one size fits all. There are different ways it can help you and each one suits a different situation.

Option 1: Training an existing employee to handle HR alongside their main role.

It can work in very small teams but the risk is overloading someone and things getting missed.

Option 2: Hiring an in-house HR manager.

You get dedicated, daily support but the salary and on-costs don't always stack up for smaller businesses.

Option 3: Using a national HR provider.

Useful for basic, low-risk queries but you'll often speak to someone different each time with a limited understanding of how your business runs.

Option 4: Working with an independent HR consultant.

You get tailored, consistent support from someone who knows your business, without adding another salary to payroll.

The right fit depends on your size, your budget and how hands-on you need that support to be.

If you want to talk through what makes sense for where you are right now, we're always happy to have that conversation.

Do you need HR support but you're not sure what type or where to get started?In HR, there are different levels of suppor...
21/05/2026

Do you need HR support but you're not sure what type or where to get started?

In HR, there are different levels of support we can offer.

1️⃣ Level 1: Your compliance foundation

Making sure that you're legally compliant is the most important thing we can help with. We do this by reviewing your contracts, policies and handbook.

2️⃣ Level 2: Day-to-day operational management

Managing employees can take up a lot of your time and energy. You can outsource the day-to-day management to us and we'll take it off your plate.

3️⃣ Level 3: Tactical, reactive support

In the world of HR, you'd be surprised at what we sometimes have to deal with. If you're thrown a curve ball, we're here to help you to manage it in the best interests of your business.

4️⃣ Level 4: Strategic support

If your business has big goals, we're here to help you to leverage your team, your greatest asset.

Want to jump on a call to discuss how we can help? Feel free to book in a confidential chat with us today.

Think employment tribunals are only a problem for big companies?Actually, in our experience, it's the opposite.Small bus...
19/05/2026

Think employment tribunals are only a problem for big companies?

Actually, in our experience, it's the opposite.

Small businesses are often more exposed because you're relying on informal processes and fewer safeguards.

In the carousel below, we've highlighted 5 common practices that catch small businesses out and what you can do about it.

Take a look and if you need help with putting more safer processes in place, we'd be delighted to help.

You know you need HR support for your business, but how do you know which is the right type?Should you hire someone full...
14/05/2026

You know you need HR support for your business, but how do you know which is the right type?

Should you hire someone full-time? Outsource it to a big provider? Work with an independent consultant?

Each option has different strengths, risks and costs.

It's a lot to consider, but our latest guide breaks all of this information down so you can more easily work out what's best for a small business like yours.

Read it below.

Since April, sick pay is payable from day one and the lower earnings limit has been removed.Have you updated your proces...
12/05/2026

Since April, sick pay is payable from day one and the lower earnings limit has been removed.

Have you updated your processes to reflect this?

For most small businesses, this means more people qualify for SSP and the cost starts sooner. If short-term absence is already something you deal with regularly, this change hits harder than it looks on paper.

Here's what to check now:

πŸ’· Payroll setup

Make sure that your system reflects the removal of waiting days and the earnings threshold.

If it hasn't been updated, you could be underpaying or overpaying without knowing it.

πŸ“„ Your sickness absence policy

If it still references waiting days or a minimum earnings limit, it's out of date. Your managers and employees need to be working from the same current version.

πŸ”„ Return-to-work conversations

A short, consistent check-in after every absence is one of the simplest tools you have. It doesn't need to be formal. It just needs to happen every time.

πŸ“Š Attendance tracking

You can't manage what you don't measure. If you're not recording absence consistently, you won't spot patterns until they've already become costly.

πŸ—£οΈ Manager confidence

Your managers are the first to notice when absence increases. Make sure that they know how to have early conversations without avoiding them or escalating too quickly.

The changes aren't dramatic on their own, but if your processes haven't caught up, the costs add up quietly.

If you want to sense-check where your absence management sits right now, drop a comment or send us a message.

Our May HR update is here with practical guidance for business owners navigating people issues right now.This month we a...
11/05/2026

Our May HR update is here with practical guidance for business owners navigating people issues right now.

This month we are covering:

A tribunal case that shows why your investigation process matters just as much as the outcome

- Why so many employees are not using their full holiday entitlement and what it means for your business
- Remote job adverts at their lowest level since 2020, what this shift means for hiring
- Everyday management mistakes that end up in tribunals and how to avoid them
- Your questions answered on dismissals, contracts and when to get formal HR processes in place

Read it below.

Do you know what the Employment Rights Act updates are and how they affect your business?This isn't something business o...
08/05/2026

Do you know what the Employment Rights Act updates are and how they affect your business?

This isn't something business owners can sleep on.

New laws are being introduced that affect many areas, from training to workforce planning to tighter performance documentation.

Here's a summary of what you need to know, plus the actions you need to take and when.

πŸ“Œ Milestone 1: Changes already in force

- Protective awards in collective redundancy cases can now reach 6 months of pay.
- Paternity Leave and Unpaid Parental Leave now start from Day 1.
- Bereaved Partner’s Paternity Leave applies.
- Statutory Sick Pay begins on Day 1 with no lower earnings limit.
- Whistleblowing protections have expanded, including around sexual harassment.
- Trade union recognition is now simpler.
- The Fair Work Agency has been established.
- Updated menopause and gender equality guidance applies.

What this means: Many employers now need updated policies, contracts, absence processes and manager training.

πŸ“Œ Milestone 2: 6-month unfair dismissal rights

From 1 July 2026, new starters will qualify for unfair dismissal protection after 6 months of service.

What this means:

Probation management, early performance handling and documentation must be tighter. Informal or rushed dismissals now carry much higher risk.

πŸ“Œ Milestone 3: October 2026 changes

- A new duty to prevent sexual harassment.
- Stronger trade union access.
- Requirement to inform staff about their right to join a union.
- Fair Pay Agreement body for Adult Social Care.
- Tighter tipping rules.
- Further recognition reforms.

What this means:

Stronger prevention measures, clearer reporting routes and updated onboarding and training will all be needed.

πŸ“Œ Milestone 4: Changes in 2027

- 6-month unfair dismissal qualifying period fully applies.
- Potential for uncapped compensatory awards.
- Greater protection for pregnant employees and new mothers.
- Changes to flexible working.
- Statutory bereavement leave, including pregnancy loss.
- New rules ending exploitative zero hours practices.
- Regulation of umbrella companies.
- Fire and rehire becoming automatically unfair in most cases.

What this means:

These changes will reshape workforce planning, dismissal handling, shift scheduling and how contractual changes are managed.

Which of these milestones will create the biggest shift for your business this year?

A formal grievance is not something that you can afford to ignore or handle casually.Once an employee puts something in ...
30/04/2026

A formal grievance is not something that you can afford to ignore or handle casually.

Once an employee puts something in writing, how you respond matters just as much as what they are raising.

If you don’t follow Acas guidance and your own procedure, the risk of escalation and tribunal claims increases.

Here’s what good grievance handling looks like in practice.

πŸ“© Acknowledge it quickly

Silence creates anxiety. Confirm receipt, explain next steps and give a rough timescale.

βš–οΈ Decide how it should be handled

Written complaints and anything relating to treatment, behaviour, pay or legal rights should be treated as formal.

πŸ“‹ Follow your procedure

Use an impartial manager, apply the process consistently and make sure that the employee knows what to expect.

πŸ” Investigate properly

Gather evidence, speak to those involved and keep clear notes. Rushed investigations are where employers fall down.

πŸ—£οΈ Hold a grievance meeting

Listen, stay calm and allow the employee to be accompanied if they’re entitled to be.

βœ‰οΈ Confirm the outcome in writing

Explain what you investigated, what you found, your decision, any actions and the right of appeal.

πŸ” Fix the root cause

Grievances often highlight deeper issues around communication, management or expectations.

Handled well, a grievance can usually be resolved and kept proportionate.

How do you currently approach grievances when they land and what tends to be the hardest part to manage?

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