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A
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- Annualized
hours – contractual working hours are expressed in the total
number of hours to be worked per year, allowing flexible working
patterns throughout the year.
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B
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- Business/life
coaching – the employer offers support from a trained mentor,
normally based outside the firm, either over the phone or face-to-face.
The employee has regular sessions with their coach who advises on issues
relating to business and personal goals.
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C
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- Career breaks
– a break from employment with an organization, usually following
maternity leave. The contract of employment ceases but the individual
and organization remain in contact at agreed intervals. The individual
has a set amount of time (say 1, 3 or 5 years) during which they can
decide whether or not to return to work, although their job may not
always be held open Career breaks are increasingly being opened up to
all employees including non-parents to facilitate personal development.
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- Childcare
vouchers – these vouchers are given or sold by employers
to parents at a reduced cost or substituted for a part of salary, enable
working parents to save money on childcare. As such, they are a good way
of encouraging staff retention, particularly among women returning from
maternity leave.
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- Company
fitness center – this is a gym or health club either owned by
or outsourced by a company for use by employees. The gym is usually
based on-site.
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- Concierge
services / Lifestyle management services – the employer buys in
the services of a company that assists employees in managing their busy
home lives by doing time-consuming tasks for them. Tasks can range from
dog walking to sourcing emergency childcare or organizing a wedding. The
cost varies according to the level of service at the highest level,
concierge companies will find you a private jet for hire within 24
hours.
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- Consolidated
hours - contractual full-time hours are worked in 4 longer days
instead of 5 days.
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- Core hours
– hours (say 10am to 4pm) during which flextime workers must be engaged
in work.
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E
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- Emergency
leave - employees have the right to take a reasonable period of
time off work to deal with an emergency involving a dependant, such as a
child, and not be dismissed or victimized for doing so. Your right to time off
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- Employee
assistance programs – these organizations offer a mix of
counseling, concierge services and information on everything from
finding schools to help with bereavement. Employers pay a subscription
so that employees can phone for help at any time of the day or night.
Employee assistance programs also help businesses understand what their
employees’ key stressors are so that they can address the root causes.
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F
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- Family-friendly
– any policy or practice deemed to help families spend more time
together and/or enjoy a better quality of life.
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- Fixed-term
contract – sometimes referred to as a short-term or temporary
contract, this type of employment contract is established for a fixed
period of time only. Contracts can have an end date and/or be renewable.
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- Flexible
benefits – employees are offered a raft of benefits from which
they can choose those that suit their circumstances and are appropriate
to their life stage. This may mean that an employee can buy more holiday
days, increase their healthcare benefits, or buy leisure or retail
vouchers at a reduced rate. Employees decide which benefits they want on
an annual basis and those benefits then remain in force for a year.
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- Flexible
working – any form of alternative working pattern that is
negotiable between the employer and employee. Flexible working allows
employees to meet personal commitments (such as dropping children off at
school) and aspirations (such as doing a degree) and meet business
demands.
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- Flextime
– a system permitting flexibility of working hours at the beginning or
end of the day. Employees must work the ‘core hours’ set by the company
and complete an agreed total number of hours.
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H
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- Holiday
purchase scheme – a scheme that enables employees to buy an
additional number of days’ holiday on top of their annual entitlement.
The cost of a day’s holiday will usually vary according to salary and be
taken out of an employee’s annual pay. There is usually a limit to the
number of days that can be bought.
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I
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- Improved
maternity provisions – provisions provided by the employer that
are in excess of the statutory minimum. Examples include higher pay
whilst on maternity leave or offering a ‘returnee’s bonus’.
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- In-house
occupational health provisions - the provision of work-related
health facilities enabling employees to have medicals (either prior to
recruitment or on request), health checks and gets advice on health
issues.
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J
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- Job share
– an arrangement by which the responsibilities of one job are split
between two part-time workers.
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M
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- Mentoring
– the employer provides personal coaching from a trained mentor, who is
either an employee or from an outside firm, to support the employee with
career-related issues.
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O
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- On-site
childcare – the employer has childcare at the place of
employment for staff with children. Such facilities reduce time
traveling to and from work, since parents don’t have to drop off and
pick up their children elsewhere, and employees can visit their children
at lunchtimes. On-site childcare save time and reduce anxiety in case of
illness or emergencies.
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P
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- Parental
leave – leave that parents or adoptive parents (both men and
women) can take by law to care for their child after its arrival or
adoption. Employers must allow parents to take the statutory minimum
length of unpaid leave, but some offer-enhanced provisions, such as paid
leave.
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- Part-time
working – working fewer hours than the normal number of
full-time hours set by an organization but with the same status as a
full-time worker.
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- Private
healthcare benefits – the employer buys in healthcare services
from a private healthcare firm, to enable employees to receive free
healthcare benefits, or benefits at a reduced cost.
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S
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- Sabbatical
– a period of unpaid leave granted at intervals for rest, study or
travel. Can also be described as a career break, but is usually taken
for reasons of personal development (or perhaps health) rather than to
care for a child. Sabbaticals were originally granted only to academics.
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- Self-managed
working – employees manage their own working pattern and time
to deliver agreed outputs.
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- Shift
working – the working day is split into shifts (say of 12pm to
8pm and 8pm to 4am) enabling operational hours to be extended? Employees
work one shift a day they can be full- or part-time workers.
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- Subsidized
healthcare or complementary therapies – the employer offers
therapies, such as massage or osteopathy, at a reduced cost to
employees. The therapist usually visits the workplace once or twice a
week.
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T
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- Telecommuting
– the use of technology, such as computers and telephones, to enable
employees to work from home while maintaining contact with colleagues,
customers or a central office. By arrangement with the employer, the
employee works from home either all or part of the working week.
Telecommuting can be full- or part-time employees. The employer normally
provides technological facilities in the home worker’s home.
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- Term-time
contracts – contractual working hours are established during
school terms only and school holidays are not worked. Pay can be
averaged out over 12 monthly installments or paid only for time worked,
i.e. the employee does not receive pay during school holidays. The
contract of employment continues during school holidays.
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- Time in lieu
provisions – employees take time off as a form of compensation
for hours they have worked in addition to their contractual hours.
Employees take time off in proportion to the number of extra hours
worked, so 10 hours’ additional work would equate to 10 hours’ time in
lieu. They do not receive overtime pay.
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- Time
sovereignty – the control an individual has over their work and
workload, including when, where and how they work. The more autonomy
individuals have, the less stressed they are likely to be.
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U
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- Unpaid leave
– absence from work for a set period of time, as agreed between the
employer and employee. The contract of employment remains in force but
salary stops. The employer and employee need to discuss whether
benefits, such as holiday accrual, continue or not.
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W
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- Work-life
balance – having a measure of control over when, where and how
you work, leading to being able to enjoy an optimal quality of life.
Work-life balance is achieved when an individual’s right to a fulfilled
life inside and outside paid work is accepted and respected as the norm,
to the mutual benefit of the individual, business and society.
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