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Communicating With Employees When the News Is Not Good

Posted April 28th, 2010 by Paula Nolte, in HRMG Solutions news

Last week I attended a dinner meeting of the Greater Valley Forge HR Association.  The speaker was Frank Roche from iFractal.com.

Frank’s topic was especially timely for stressed workforces and HR departments  – “How to Communicate with Employees When the News is Not Good”.  (We recommend you work with Frank if you are planning big changes in workforce administration.  Frank can be reached at frank.roche@ifractal.com.)

I’ll cover some of the valuable tips in segments over the next few weeks:

1.  Communicating is about effecting changes in behavior  – which can be done either well or badly with associated consequences.

2.  Always tell the truth to employees – do not try to spin anything.

3.  People hate surprises more than they hate change.

4.  Sequence how important information is introduced: Talk about it, email it and provide tactile visual material. 

5.  People learn in different ways so appeal to the visual, auditory and kinesthetic learners in your workforce.

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How To Save Money with Sage Abra HRIS

Posted April 19th, 2010 by Paula Nolte, in HRMG Solutions news

Lots of HRMG Solutions customers have stories to tell about their cost savings and workforce efficiency with Sage Abra HRIS and here is a powerful story of return on investment:

“Harristown Development Corporation Enjoys a $20,000 per year Win-Win-Win Scenario with Sage Abra Employee Self Service, Payroll and Sage Paycards …….”

Read the full story -http://www.hrmgsolutions.com/pdf/Harristown-Development-Corporation.pdf

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Health Care Reform Will Have Profound Effect on HR

Posted April 15th, 2010 by Paula Nolte, in HRMG Solutions news

Information provided on this page is from SHRM.org

Landmark health care reform signed into law on March 23, 2010 (and modified by a reconciliation measure enacted three day later) will affect how all businesses provide and administer health care benefits to their employees. But the impact will be felt differently depending on the company’s size.

Strictly speaking, the reform measure will not require employers to provide health care benefits to their workers. However, many companies with 50 or more employees that don’t offer health care coverage to their staffs will be subject to a tax penalty of $2,000 for every full-time worker. A company’s first 30 workers would not count toward the penalty, but the assessment could be a sizable one.

The reform measure shouldn’t have a huge impact on large businesses that already provide health benefits, sources familiar with the issue say. And businesses with fewer than 50 employees will be exempt from the penalty. These changes will take effect on Jan. 1, 2014; the final rules could be changed by a reconciliation bill that must be approved by the Senate.

Employers that offer health benefits but have at least one employee who applies for a federal subsidy to purchase individual health care insurance would also be subject to the penalty. The penalty as passed by the Senate in December 2009 was set at $750 per employee. However, the House approved a reconciliation measure along with the reform bill.

The reconciliation bill accounts for the increase in the penalty employers will have to pay. Employers that do offer health care coverage might still be required to provide help to their low- and middle-income workers who opt out of the company’s health insurance plan and want to buy health insurance on their own. Any employee who earns less than four times federal poverty level and pays more than 8 percent of their income for the employer-sponsored coverage will have the option of purchasing health insurance through health care exchanges, which the new reform law will create.

If an employee chooses to purchase a health plan through an exchange, an employer will have to provide a “free-choice voucher,” which must be equal to the amount paid to provide coverage to participants in the company’s health care plan.

Under the reform measure, businesses with more than 200 employees will be required to enroll employees into their health care plans automatically. Employees will then have the choice to opt out of the plan.

The reform measure will create state-operated exchanges that would permit self-employed workers, small businesses and people without health care coverage to shop for insurance plans. By 2014, states will have to set up Small Business Health Options Programs, or “SHOP Exchanges,” which will allow small businesses to create buying pools to purchase health plans. The measure defines small businesses as organizations with 100 employees or less.

The reform measure will require individuals by 2014 to purchase health care coverage. People who have religious objections or cannot afford coverage would be able to apply for waivers. Individuals who do not obtain coverage would pay a penalty of $95 in 2014, which would increase in 2016 to $750 or 2 percent of their income (whichever amount is greater).

The legislation as passed would establish a grant program designed to help small and mid-sized employers develop and strengthen workplace wellness programs. The grant program would require participating employers to offer wellness programs to all employees, and employers could not require participation in a wellness program to qualify for financial incentives.

Beginning in 2018, employers that offer workers higher cost plans–those with total premiums of $10,200 or more for individuals and $27,500 for families–would be subject to a 40 percent tax on the excess premium. Although the taxes would be levied on the insurer, experts predict that the assessment would be passed on to the consumer in the form of higher premiums or reduced benefits.

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Social Media Fears

Posted April 9th, 2010 by Harold Ford, in HR Related News

I had the wonderful opportunity to speak at an all-day HR Summit sponsored by the Greater Reading Chamber of Commerce & Industry and the Berks County SHRM this past week. My topic was “Socially Recruiting”, or why HR folks must embrace the social media revolution to source, hire, and retain talent in their organization.

Overall, the topic was well received. One main point I covered was the fears of social networking in businesses. Many fears keep businesses from harnessing the power of social networking in their organization. This is why 60% of Fortune 500 execs said Social Media isn’t even on their agenda.

HR can help. Using the tools out there, HR can be the leader in ushering this communication revolution to its workforce. And for the majority of your employees (80%, to be more precise), this methodology isn’t new. But it isn’t easy. There are many myths and fears about social media that keep it outside the corporate firewall.

To get started, take a look at this terrific PowerPoint presentation on  “Social Media Fears and Overcoming Them”.

What are your Social Media fears? What keeps you from utilizing this technology at your office?

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