Probationary period - To have or have not
JAlderman
10 Posts
Hi All,
I've been asked to find out what the latest thinking is about probationary periods. We did away with them a few years ago, because at the time the concern was employees might think they had a permanent job if they made it through the probationary period (the implied contract issue). Also we didn't want managers to think that just because someone was still in their probationary period they could, necessarily, fire the person with impunity. But now,there is some interest in possibly reinstituting one.
I would appreciate it if you would share with me what you're company is doing (whether or not you have a probationary period and how long it is) and what you find to be the pros and cons of having one. Thanks.
I've been asked to find out what the latest thinking is about probationary periods. We did away with them a few years ago, because at the time the concern was employees might think they had a permanent job if they made it through the probationary period (the implied contract issue). Also we didn't want managers to think that just because someone was still in their probationary period they could, necessarily, fire the person with impunity. But now,there is some interest in possibly reinstituting one.
I would appreciate it if you would share with me what you're company is doing (whether or not you have a probationary period and how long it is) and what you find to be the pros and cons of having one. Thanks.
Comments
Our time frame is 90 days after that they become a regular employee and enrolled in our benefits. Our managers seem to like this because during the specified time they can monitor how the ee works with others and if they are able to keep up with our work load. Attendance issues are also reviewed.
We have 'probation' for disciplinary reasons.
Good luck with your decision,
Dutch2
Susan Fentin
Associate Editor
Massachusetts Employment Law Letter
Skoler, Abbott & Presser, PC
(413) 737-4753 [email]sfentin@skoler-abbott.com[/email]
Once someone finishes probation we can't just get rid of them.
While on probation it's easy to fire someone. (regardless of documentation, tact, protected classes, disabilities, etc.)
A manager can just decide to put someone "back on probation."
And even if you have relabeled it as Introductory many managers and employees will still believe the above, no matter how many times you say otherwise. People just seem to have an unshakable belief that they know what probation is, even if you change the name. At-will statements are necessary and may provide legal cover, but they don't dispel the mistaken beliefs.
Our managers understand the difficulty of replacement and the loss of training time and investment in a new employee, so we use the first 3 weeks as our goal to sort out the relationships. The employee may and they have walked away after the first day, our "world of PORK work" is not for every one!
Hope this helps, yes I recommend a orientation/training period of 8 weeks (60 days). We have a set of 8 weeks of training task to be achieved, the employ is tested in written/verbal/demonstation formats each week on that weeks training objectives, with a review of last weeks failed objectives. As a result, there can be no doubt as to the training issues and attitude issues as they relate to performance issues and seperation of service conditions. You notice that we stay away from the word "fireing". The new employee will see early on that he/she is not cutting it weekly after testing and failure of an OJT program. It also allows us to defend our seperation actions. Any judge, who sees the resulting testing activities in sequence, has also agreed with us that the employee was untrainable and our decision to seperate our relationship was a right decision. The case unfolds very nicely! We win every time. It also works with longer term employees, who do not know the technical nature of the position.
PORK
Thanks for responding. What is an "OJT program" and what kind of a test do you use for attitude?