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  • James Fatherley

Help your business fly with an HR Strategy

It’s pretty much 'lesson 101' when you’re running a business: develop and stick to a business strategy. But what about an HR strategy?

An HR strategy can give you a competitive edge and is often neglected by SMEs in favour of sales-driving strategies.

Get your this right and you’ll drive growth, fill gaps in technical skills and encouraging behaviours that contribute towards a more successful organisation.

Without a solid HR strategy, you put your business at risk. A lack of cohesive human resource planning impacts your business from top to bottom - think costly hiring mistakes and dissatisfied customers.

In this article, we focus on understanding what an HR strategy is and provide tips on developing a successful HR strategy for your small business.

What is an HR strategy?

At its simplest, an HR Strategy is a formalised plan that aligns your human capital with your business’ needs. A well-planned HR strategy lets you allocate time and resources to support your business effectively.

For instance - is your business plan to innovate and introduce new technology to the market? If so, you’ll want to hire researchers and a specialist sales team. You’ll also need to foster a more innovative culture.

However, if the next 5 years are about improving customer service and establishing a reputation for trust, you’ll need to focus on a different set of initiatives.

A good HR strategy will help you hire, on-board and train your staff more efficiently. It will also help you keep your best employees, and establish a healthy workplace culture that avoids the risk of employment tribunals and other bad employer PR.

7 tips for developing a successful HR strategy

So, how do you go about building a HR strategy that helps your business thrive? Here are our 7 top-tips.

1. Align your HR strategy to the overall business strategy

It almost goes without saying that your HR strategy cannot be developed in isolation - it must support your broader business strategy.

Be certain that you’ve identified every area of the business strategy with a human element attached to it – from recruitment through to compliance. There shouldn’t be any surprises in the HR strategy; it should be a natural progression.

2. Consider external factors

You can’t ignore the way external factors affect your business’ performance. A successful HR strategy takes account of these.

Think about:

· Employment legislation – what does current and upcoming employment legislation look like, and what are the minimum requirements to avoid falling foul of these? Look at the upcoming changes to IR35 for example - these may change the way many SMEs deal with contractors.

· Technological developments – advances in tech are rapidly changing the way we recruit and work. How should you incorporate these latest technical advances into your business and how will they complement your existing workforce? Are your employees worried about tech replacing their roles? Is there anything you can do to help allay their fears or help them retrain so their skills are more relevant to the changing world of work?

· Best practice examples - Learn from other employers who have struck gold with their HR strategy. From flexible holiday allowances to remote working, there are so many examples of workplaces that have changed engagement and productivity by doing things differently.

3. Get input from other stakeholders

Make sure other stakeholders are onboard with the new HR strategy, too.

From software budgets to skills planning, getting the input of the rest of the business will ensure your approach fully supports everyone at the right time, for a better chance of success.

4. Be culture-positive

Think about the way the initiatives in your HR strategy may affect your Culture.

Multi-tasking initiatives such as flexible working, inclusive hiring practices and career conversations will (if implemented well) do more than one job. They can help improve employee wellbeing, increase productivity and retention - and that’s just for starters.

But beware: if they’re implemented poorly or ignored altogether, these initiatives can damage your workplace culture.


5. Monitor

You can’t manage what you don’t measure. Include KPIs in your HR strategy to help you understand how you’re performing. You don’t have to achieve everything at once – give yourself short, mid-term and longer-term goals.

Tools such as absence rates and employee turnover can give you an indicator of how you’re tracking.

For more insight, KPIs such as employee satisfaction can be helpful, especially if they’re backed up with an open culture.

6. Get advice & support

If you’re a small business, it’s likely your HR manager or director doubles up with another role. Research shows that CEOs are spending a 5th of their working week on HR tasks.

Take the pressure off with a dedicated HR Resource – a consultant can really help take the pressure off and advise on areas that need special expertise.

On a more practical level, investing in HR Software like Breathe HR can help make life easier by providing a central location for all HR & Employee documents. The system also supports the day-to-day running of the business with functions such as Holiday Tracking and performance management.

7. Stay flexible

Your HR strategy is a living document, and just like a journey programmed into a sat-nav, you may need to re-route your HR strategy you encounter problems along the way.

Don’t be afraid of changing your approach if factors change or if you realise that certain plans aren’t coming together.

Reviewing your strategy on a quarterly basis alongside other business strategies will help you keep your plans running smoothly and tuned to your business’s needs.


How HR can support business strategy

As well as how you can develop a HR strategy for your business, it’s also worth considering how HR can support and develop your business strategy.


People first

Your people are the greatest asset to your business- and HR is around to make sure that your employees are happy, safe, and productive at work.

From recruiting and onboarding new team members, to training and development and managing the performance of staff, the human resources department ensures that everyone is supported at every stage of their career.

After all- without your people, there is no strategy.


Future-proof your organisation

We’ve seen how valuable HR has been to almost every business throughout the pandemic. Those people responsible for managing HR in businesses of every size have worked tirelessly to ensure the wellbeing and safety of people in workplaces all over the world.

Planning for the future and creating contingency plans for other events that could potentially disrupt the day-to-day running of a business is essential. The role of the HR department is to ensure that there are plans in place to support the organisation and its people – even in attempting to prepare for the unexpected. Ensuring you’ve got plans to future-proof your business is now more critical than ever, as we’ve seen in recent times.


HR facilitates the implementation of company goals. By supporting managers to develop their teams and break larger company goals down into manageable objectives, the broader company strategy becomes part of everyday work and stays at the forefront of employee’s minds.

To find out more and talk with the team at Digital HR Northeast about how they can help with your HR Strategy message talktotheteam@digitalhrne.co.uk



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