Exhibition News July 2019 | Page 37

Best Practice Myth or reality? Julie Phillips, chief operating officer of CHS Group UK, on getting the basics right for successful flexible working F “Trust plays a very important role – you have to respect your team to control their daily schedule and work environment” lexible working is a wonderful idea, but employers can be slow to embrace the change as business owners worry it could damage productivity. It’s not a view we share at CHS Group, where it’s one of the founding principles of the company. Our experience has been that it is very beneficial and boosts productivity. When I joined CHS Group back in July 2014 I thought it was an amazing and novel opportunity to work for a business which allows me to work from home full time with flexible working hours. I was intrigued to learn from our CEO and founder, Emma Cartmell, back in 2009 that she started the company with a very clear vision. Emma felt as a business owner she gained certain flexibility around her working day but why should only the business owners and directors of a company benefit, why not every single employee? The CHS Group culture was born! Five years on, I am happy to report we have grown to a team of 11 and currently looking to increase this further. We knew we needed to focus on three main areas to make sure our culture was aligned and met our business strategies and objectives but still offered flexible working for all staff: • We agreed the basis of our core values and use them as our guiding principles to define the behaviour we expect from each other and how we work together. The team embrace these values and are measured against them as part of our KPIs. • We took time to get the right technology for our business. Flexible working often means remote working too, but this should in no way be isolating. Our technology gives us the right tools and processes to work collaboratively. These tools help us to stay productive, visible and operate as a tight-knit team. • Communication and a meeting rhythm are sacrosanct in the diary. We have set meetings for the full team every week which allows us to touch base as a business. We make sure our meetings have a consistent agenda with the aim to make sure everything is on track, that we’re connected as a team and we solve any issues. Flexible working has provided great payback for us as a team, resulting in increased staff morale and engagement, fierce loyalty to the company, reduced absenteeism and a reduction in staff turnover. Trust plays a very important role – you have to respect your team to control their daily schedule and work environment. I recently spoke to a number of my family and friends and came to the conclusion that in today’s corporate world, flexible working is still not the status quo and is still difficult for employees to approach management to discuss and this made me ask the question, why? I am the first person to admit that it’s not all a bed of roses; it needs to have a clear and widely understood goal otherwise it will merely be a policy which sounds good on paper. It requires dedication and resource to implement and also needs to live and breathe throughout your organisation. All I do know that everyone working here at CHS Group is fully invested and proud in the culture we have built and that is a way of life for us all but with that we know we have to work hard every day as the fundamental principle of flexible working is that the needs of the business must be met. It’s a classic ‘all for one and one for all’ policy! July — 37