Five Ways to Deal Effectively With Staff Sickness in a Call Centre

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Filed under - Industry Insights

We all know that days off due to sickness and injury can create problems with meeting deadlines and schedules, maintaining morale, delivering high levels of service and maintaining productivity.

Yet the latest Office of National Statistics figures tell us that on average in 2016 there were just 4.3 days lost per worker due to sickness or injury in the UK.

The ONS report goes on to point out that this is the lowest recorded figure since its records began in 1993, when it was at 7.2 days. But when you scale this four days a year up across the country, it means a staggering 137.3 million working days were lost.

If you translate this into the cost to UK business, the results are alarming. Personnel Today reports that one of the largest recent surveys extrapolated that the cost to employers is an average of £16 billion each year. While the latest figures may be slightly lower than this, the cost is still high enough to make us all pause for thought.

So what can you do about it? Here at CALLCARE, we collected some ideas on what managers can do to address employee absences effectively:

1. Gather hard data

Absenteeism is not just about individuals, it’s about how unplanned leave affects your organisation as a whole. You need to know the scale of the problem and be able to identify if there are organisational issues that affect it.

  • Look for patterns in terms of timings or groupings of absences
  • Identify when increases occurred and review other organisational changes at the time
  • Are there types of workers particularly prone to absence or departments particularly affected?

2. Start reviewing cultures rather than people

Wilmar Scaufeli pinpoints in the Journal of Organizational Behavior that increases in job demands directly influence absenteeism. He also notes that decreases in job resources, such as feedback and learning opportunities, are causally related.

Particularly where stress (at work or at home) has led to absences, implementing flexible working (such as unpaid leave, different hours and days working from home) can help.

  • Encourage your management team to review working practices and introduce training and support where required
  • Consider a more flexible approach to working patterns

3. Develop a clear absenteeism policy

It’s important to be clear about exactly what is acceptable and what support is on offer.

  • Detail how many absences are acceptable in a given period of time
  • Document acceptable reasons for absence
  • Describe the support offered to help address increases in absences
  • Delineate consequences for violating the policy

4. Address issues at an individual level

While absenteeism is not all about the individual, it must also be addressed at this level.

  • Meet with the employee and discuss possible solutions
  • Offer support, training and flexibility if required
  • Document every meeting in writing
  • If things still do not improve, issue a verbal warning and ensure this is also documented
  • Any written warning issued should be signed by the employee and placed in their personnel file

5. Start thinking creatively

Thinking outside the box opens up a whole new world of potential solutions.
Outsourcing can often relieve the strain on your staff. Offering intelligent outsourcing can help businesses maintain productivity without the stress.

Taking in all the above advice can ensure a healthy relationship between managers and employees in communicating and dealing with absence issues.

Gemma Harding, Head of Corporate Services at CALLCARE

Author: Rachael Trickey

Published On: 18th Sep 2017
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