I’m just back in the office following our Employment Law
Briefing and I’m half way through drawing up a list of action points on the
back of it!
The briefing, organised in partnership with Hegarty LLP
Solicitors, was on the subject of Social Networking and the Workplace.
We know this is an area of concern for many employers in the
city by the huge response we had to invitations.
From my point of view, it is the pace of change on the
internet and of social networking platforms that creates so many challenges.
And that was echoed by our speaker Martin Bloom, a very experienced employment
law expert.
As he said, five years ago, the kind of cases tribunals are
dealing with now were unthinkable. People dismissed for posting comments about
clients on Facebook, issues over ownership of connections on LinkedIn, cyber
bullying of former colleagues on Twitter… even that sentence would have meant
very little a decade ago!
Martin touched a chord with many delegates – myself included
– when he mentioned the importance of a company having a social networking
policy. An internet usage policy isn’t enough.
Every employer needs to have a well thought out, detailed
and regularly reviewed policy governing the use of social media at work. This
needs to be written into contracts and – vitally – employees need to be trained
in it.
The easiest solution may be to ban the use of social
networking in work time on work equipment completely. You may also need to
consider the rules you wish to set governing people using their personal mobile
phones to access Facebook or Twitter, for instance, during their working day.
Of course, in some sectors, the use of such websites is
necessary. In those cases, policies need to be even more specific. And again,
training needs to reflect that.
Martin discussed a number of cases of inappropriate use of
Facebook and emails out of hours – employees discussing clients, employees
emailing former colleagues – which had resulted in employment tribunals.
Again, these issues are all relatively new and the law,
courts and tribunals are having to evolve around them. Many employers are
playing catch up with their staff on this but thought must be given to getting
ahead.
I’d be interested to hear the stance other employers take on
the use of social networking. Feel free to leave a comment.
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