Monday 16 July 2012

Are you missing the most important step in your workplace investigations?



With employment tribunal claims still on the rise, it's perhaps no wonder that organisations are placing ever more importance on conducting their workplace investigations accurately and consistently.

The risks of not doing are impossible to ignore. A poorly handled grievance or disciplinary investigation, for example, can incur further unnecessary financial outlay e.g. having to re-investigate incomplete areas as part of a hearing or appeal. Or if the matter reaches employment tribunal, it's paramount to have a robust report in place that can stand up to scrutiny and challenge, as well as an investigator confident to defend their methodology and findings.

Any workplace investigation must of course follow the organisation's policies and guidelines prescribing the mandatory stages of the formal process. For most internal Investigating Officers, such procedures provide invaluable reassurance that they are following the necessary steps in their evidence gathering, interviewing and report writing. (Whether the policies can also impart the mindset of a competent investigator is a matter for another blog post...).

What we tend not to see in organisational investigation procedures is 'defining the Terms of Reference' – fundamental in our eyes, and which applies to any type of allegation or organisation. After the investigator has met with the Complainant, they are then a position to define what exactly is being alleged, teasing apart the original complaint/grievance and interview answers into a coherent one, two, three – however many – separate allegations. Our investigators will document these succinctly, alongside a declaration of agreed next steps and assertions of responsibilities and confidentiality.

Having this summarised on paper is valuable for a number of reasons:

-        The Investigator has the opportunity to take stock at a crossroads section of the investigation, and if there is indeed a case to answer, can proceed with clarity and confidence.
-        The document adds integrity and credibility to the process, and, if appropriate can be shared with other stakeholders (e.g. parties or Trade Union representatives)
-        They act as a reference point to inform how any subsequent issues/queries are handled
-        The Terms can be added into the Report to save time and add weight that a clear process was followed

There have been countless times when we have needed to refer back to the Terms of Reference for a case at various points within and beyond the investigation, and therefore strongly recommend that organisations consider building it into their standard investigation procedure.

Feel free to get in touch to see an anonymised example of a Terms of Reference.