Making labour relations training count

28th January 2013

The number of legal and IR professionals who are seeking labour relations training through consultancies such as ours is increasing. However, it is also true that these practitioners often experience great difficulty in passing their learning on within their organisations. The result of this is that the organisation as a whole does not benefit from the knowledge gained.

In addition, because the learning gained from training remains confined to the IR and legal team it is these departments that are stuck with all of the responsibility for dealing with labour issues. For example, many of our clients are still making the mistake of requiring their IR departments to chair disciplinary hearings and to hand down disciplinary sanctions. The truth is that this is extremely poor business practice. While the IR department should provide expert advice and guidance on labour law and disciplinary practice it is line management that must gain the expertise necessary for disciplining their employees and then take charge of making it happen.

In our experience the reasons for the difficulties in passing on the new skills and knowledge include the following:

Management is under “too much pressure to waste time on training”. The typical South African line manager and supervisor is much more a doer than a manager. But to say that a manager has no time to undergo training means that the manager is not delegating tasks sufficiently.


Insufficient funds are budgeted for such training. lt is a never ending source of wonderment to us that employers are not prepared to spend a few hundred rand on training a manager but do not mind taking the risk of having to spend tens of thousands of rand on going to the Labour Courts. We have represented countless employers taken to court because a manager mishandled a shop floor grievance or disciplinary matter and the employee was unfairly dismissed. ln some cases, because the line manager mishandled the matter, the line manager gets fired for incurring unnecessary legal costs!

The potential to manage people well may be inborn to some extent. But the knowledge of the law must be learned as must many skills related to conducting employee management properly in line with the law and company policy.

To book for our 6 March seminar in Johannesburg on Defeating the Dangers of Dismissal please contact Ronni via 0845217492 or ronni@labourlawadvice.co.za.

Written by  lvan lsraelstam, Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888-7944, 0828522973 or on e-mail address: ivan@labourlawadvice.co.za. Go to: www.labourlawadvice.co.za.

This article first appeared in The Star.