Buzzing About HR

Kate Underwood

🎙️ Buzzing About HR Straight-talking HR for the people doing payroll, sales and playing workplace therapist before lunch. If you run a UK small business, or you're the HR-of-one trying to keep the wheels on, this podcast is for you.  No corporate jargon.  No "synergy."  Just real answers to the people's problems no one warned you about. Hosted by award-winning HR expert Kate Underwood, each episode tackles the moments small business owners actually face: The employee who's brilliant at the job and causes chaos in the teamThe manager who avoids hard conversations until they turn into a bonfireThe "small issue" grievance that suddenly becomes a formal complaintThe sickness pattern is suspiciously linked to Mondays and paydayThe resignation that makes you think, " What did we miss?" You'll get plain-English UK employment law, practical advice on performance, absence, hiring and retention, and grown-up culture conversations, all usable the same day. No theory. No paperwork museums. No advice that only works in big HR departments with unlimited budgets. This is also a permission slip to lead like a human. Clear standards. Fair boundaries. Decent communication. Less drama. The goal is a calmer workplace, fewer sleepless nights, and a team that actually wants to stick around. And yes, Hazel the office dog pops up too. Because nothing says "people management" quite like a judgmental stare from a Wellbeing Officer who's never written a policy in her life. ☕ Start here: take the FREE HR Health Check and see where your risks and your quick wins are hiding. New episodes every Tuesday.

  1. 15시간 전

    Contract Changes Without Fire And Rehire

    You’ve got a contract term you regret. Maybe it’s overtime you can’t sustain, enhanced sick pay that keeps biting every winter, or a bonus structure that looked generous when the team was small and now feels ruinous. You’ve heard the “solution” at the golf club: dismiss them and re-engage them on new terms. The problem is that, from October 2026, that move becomes a legal landmine for most employers, with dismissal and re-engagement usually treated as automatically unfair dismissal under the post-Employment Rights Act 2025 landscape.  We walk through what actually changes, why the public mood and tribunal risk matter for SMEs, and the narrow circumstances where the old approach might still be argued as business survival. Then we get practical. We lay out the five-step, grown-up method for contract change in 2026: build a clear business case, check the existing variation and flexibility clauses (and why they rarely cover big changes), consult properly rather than just “inform”, and make agreement more likely with fair trade-offs like phased changes or a one-off payment.  We also bust the myths that cause the most damage, including the idea that you can simply give notice of a change, or that small businesses fly under the radar. You’ll finish with a quick action list you can do this week, plus a contract review conversation script mentioned in the show notes. If you find this useful, subscribe, share it with a fellow business owner, and leave a review so more people can find straight-talking HR help. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    16분
  2. 1일 전

    *SPECIAL* When The Tequila Was Not In Budget

    A summer Friday work BBQ can feel harmless right up until it isn’t. One drink too many, an argument in front of clients, a messy taxi story that surfaces secondhand, and by Tuesday you are juggling a complaint, a possible safeguarding concern and a sensitive disclosure without a single written policy to anchor your decisions. We’re talking about the workplace alcohol policy gap most SMEs don’t know they have until it lands in their lap. We break down what a fit-for-purpose alcohol policy actually covers and why it is not a sneaky attempt to ban fun. We get specific about alcohol during the working day and at work events, what to do when alcohol may be affecting performance, and how to respond when someone tells you their relationship with alcohol is complicated. We also share the numbers behind the issue, from productivity loss and presenteeism to how many employees say drinking has affected work without ever telling anyone. Most importantly, we give you three practical conversations to keep in your back pocket: the short proactive team chat that introduces the policy, the concerned conversation that focuses on observable changes rather than accusation, and the disclosure conversation where your first 30 seconds can either open the door to support or slam it shut. If you want straightforward small business HR advice, clear process and humane boundaries, hit subscribe, share this with another owner, and leave a review so more SMEs stop having to “make it up as they go along”. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    15분
  3. 6월 30일

    Probation Is Not A Free Pass Anymore

    That familiar small-business safety net, “they’re under two years so we can let them go”, is about to shrink dramatically. With the Employment Rights Act changes taking effect on 1 July 2026, unfair dismissal protection moves much closer to day one, and a rushed, undocumented exit in month nine can become the expensive problem you never saw coming. We walk through what is actually changing, why the new statutory probationary period is designed to keep hiring workable, and the two words you need to remember: lighter touch. Not no touch. I explain the real-world impact for SMEs, from potential tribunal costs and management time to the trust ripple effect in a small team where everyone watches how you handle the hard moments. Then we get practical. You’ll leave with a calm 48-hour plan: fix your probation clause in your contract and offer letter, audit everyone currently in their first few months, diarise short structured reviews, and start capturing feedback in simple written notes that are boring but bulletproof. We also bust the myths that cause last-minute panic, including the idea you can “notice” your way around statutory rights or beat the deadline with a hasty dismissal. If you want straight-talking UK HR advice for small employers, hit subscribe, share this with one business owner who needs it, and leave a quick review so more people find the show. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    15분
  4. 6월 23일

    The Practical Guide To Menopause Support For Small Businesses

    Someone on your team used to be unflappable, then suddenly they’re overheated, not sleeping, forgetting things, snapping over tiny issues, and quietly losing confidence. Many managers read that as performance or attitude. We see it for what it often is: perimenopause showing up at work, in a culture that still makes the topic feel awkward to name. We get practical about menopause at work for small businesses and HR teams. We talk through what symptoms can look like day to day, why “quiet menopause” is the riskiest version for employers, and how a simple check-in can open the door without assumptions or embarrassment. We also unpack what’s changing in the UK, including the Equality Act 2010, the EHRC guidance on menopause, and the direction of travel under the Employment Rights Act 2025, which is making support a clear expectation rather than optional good behaviour. You’ll leave with a clear, low-cost plan: a one-page menopause-aware policy, a manager conversation script, and reasonable adjustments that genuinely help such as flexible starts after a bad night, time for medical appointments, cooler uniforms, fans, and better room choices. We also flag the hidden trap in many absence policies, where menopause-related sickness triggers warnings and creates avoidable discrimination risk. If you want to keep brilliant people and run a fair workplace, this is your nudge to start now. Subscribe so you never miss an episode, share it with a fellow small business owner, and leave a quick review to help more managers find it. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    15분
  5. 6월 23일

    Quiet Quitting Starts Long Before Anyone Resigns

    Someone on your team is still turning up, still delivering, still saying they’re “fine” and yet the spark has gone. That grey zone is where quiet quitting lives, and in a small business it does real damage long before anyone resigns: slower problem solving, lower energy, and a subtle drop in standards that others quietly copy. We’ve both been on the receiving end of it, and we know it’s rarely about laziness or attitude. It’s a signal that something stopped working. We get clear on what quiet quitting actually means (and what it doesn’t), then dig into the most common roots we see in UK SMEs: poor or missing feedback, workload creep without acknowledgement, and managers avoiding the harder conversations. We also bring in the numbers that make this impossible to ignore, including UK engagement data and what exit interviews reveal about how long people think about leaving before they go. Most importantly, we give you practical tools you can use this week. You’ll hear the exact sentence we use to open a real conversation, what to listen for without getting defensive, how to fix what you can quickly, how to name what you can’t change yet (pay, promotion, structure), and why booking the next chat is the difference between a one off talk and a genuine rebuild of trust. We also bust a few myths that keep managers stuck, including the idea that money solves everything. If you manage people, press play, pick one person who has gone quiet, and act early. Subscribe so you never miss an episode, share it with another manager, and leave a quick review if it helped. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    14분
  6. 6월 9일

    Your New Starter Can Take Paternity Leave From Day One

    A new starter turns up on Monday morning and, before you have even finished the office tour, tells you their baby is due in eight weeks and they want paternity leave. If your first response is to do the rota maths in your head, you’re not alone. The problem is that from April 2026, paternity leave becomes a day one right in the UK, and many small business managers are about to have these conversations with zero training and a lot of assumptions. We break down what the Employment Rights Act 2025 changes in practice, including the expansion of day one rights for paternity leave and unpaid parental leave. Then we get into the bit the law text doesn’t teach you: how to talk about it. The biggest trip-up is mixing up leave and pay. Leave is the time off and it becomes available from day one. Statutory paternity pay has its own qualifying rules, so a brand new starter may be entitled to take leave while not yet qualifying for statutory pay. Getting that sentence right can save you a complaint, a grievance, or a resignation. You’ll also hear the three most common manager mistakes we see: the gut reaction that reads as irritation, denying a right because pay rules are misunderstood, and being flexible for one person but strict with another. We give you clear scripts for interview disclosure and day one announcements, a quick consistency check, mythbusting on records and “small business exceptions”, and a seven-point action list to update contracts, templates, and onboarding. If you want plain-English HR guidance you can actually use, subscribe, share this with the person who onboards your new starters, and leave a review so more small businesses find it. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    15분
  7. 6월 8일

    Why Good Workers Go Quiet Then Leave

    One of the hardest workplace risks to spot is the person who never complains. We open with “Mark” the dependable grafter who shows up early, takes barely any time off, and quietly carries months of poor sleep, pain, and pressure until he disappears from the business. That story is not rare, and during Men’s Health Week we’re naming the pattern that costs lives and costs small businesses: men often stay quiet for longer, seek help later, and leave with less warning. We break down why men’s health at work can look different, across mental health and physical health, and the cultural layer underneath both. We talk through the research-backed patterns: lower disclosure, later presentation, and quiet exits, plus the numbers behind the urgency in the UK. We also make space for an important framing: focusing on men does not mean ignoring women; it means making sure the door is genuinely open for everyone. Then we get practical with simple, repeatable steps for managers and owners: say explicitly that health applies to everyone, use “side-door” questions that feel natural, train managers to ask twice, and make GP appointments easy with paid time and no drama. We also connect the dots between chronic pain, sleep issues, prostate concerns, low mood, and performance, because physical health is mental health at work. You’ll leave with a clear action list, myth-busting on what’s appropriate to ask, and crisis resources worth sharing. Men's Health Forum: menshealthforum.org.uk Men's Health Week 2026: menshealthforum.org.uk/mhw CALM (Campaign Against Living Miserably): thecalmzone.net | 0800 58 58 58 Samaritans: samaritans.org | 116 123 (free, 24/7) Andy's Man Club: andysmanclub.co.uk Mind — men's mental health: mind.org.uk If you found this useful, subscribe, share it with a business owner who employs mostly men, and leave a review with the one change you’re going to make this week. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    15분
  8. 6월 2일

    The Spreadsheet On Sharon’s Old Computer Strikes Again

    Someone hands in their notice, sends a polite email, and casually mentions they have 11 days of holiday left. You open your tracker and realise your “system” is a spreadsheet on someone else’s computer, a trail of emails, and a few approvals buried in WhatsApp. That’s annoying today, but from 6 April 2026 it becomes a legal risk: UK employers must keep annual leave records for every worker for six years, and those records must be accessible if the Fair Work Agency asks. We walk through what’s changing, why it matters, and how holiday law has tightened across recent reforms, including the rules affecting irregular hours and part-year workers. We also spell out the money side, because holiday pay is not soft admin: small miscalculations can stack up into arrears, and enforcement can add painful penalties on top. If you’ve ever argued about bank holidays, carry-over, or what to pay someone when they leave, you already know how quickly “we think it’s fine” turns into “prove it”. Then we get practical. We share a three-week tidy plan that does not require new software: pick one home for records, do a focused catch-up data fill, and write a one-page process that covers request, approval, and recording. We myth-bust the idea that payroll solves everything, explain why trusting staff to track their own leave is not enough, and finish with a seven-step action list you can put in the diary, including a quarterly review that stops your tracker drifting out of sync. If you want calm, defensible annual leave records and fewer nasty surprises when someone resigns, press play. Subscribe, share with a fellow small business owner, and leave a quick review so more people can find straight-talking HR help. If you’re not 100% sure how your HR is really holding up, take our free HR Health Check. It’s short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what’s working — and what needs a bit of love. And if you do it before 1st April 2026, you’ll get a bonus 7 Pillar Strategy-on-a-Page, tailored to help you manage HR brilliantly for the year ahead. That’s it for today, but if you fancy a bit of friendly HR advice in your inbox (with zero waffle), come and join our newsletter. We send out bite-sized tips, plain-English updates, and handy things you’ll actually use — no spam, no fluff. You can sign up here  If you're not sure how your HR is really holding up, take the free HR Health Check. It's short, jargon-free, and gives you a clear score on what's working and what could do with a bit of love. Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe so you never miss one, and leave a review if you've got thirty seconds. It honestly does help more small business owners find the show, and it's the cheapest good deed you'll do all week. Got a question or need actual HR support? Find Kate at kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, email buzz@kateunderwoodhr.co.uk, or follow along on social. Until next time, keep buzzing, and take care of your people.

    14분

예고편

소개

🎙️ Buzzing About HR Straight-talking HR for the people doing payroll, sales and playing workplace therapist before lunch. If you run a UK small business, or you're the HR-of-one trying to keep the wheels on, this podcast is for you.  No corporate jargon.  No "synergy."  Just real answers to the people's problems no one warned you about. Hosted by award-winning HR expert Kate Underwood, each episode tackles the moments small business owners actually face: The employee who's brilliant at the job and causes chaos in the teamThe manager who avoids hard conversations until they turn into a bonfireThe "small issue" grievance that suddenly becomes a formal complaintThe sickness pattern is suspiciously linked to Mondays and paydayThe resignation that makes you think, " What did we miss?" You'll get plain-English UK employment law, practical advice on performance, absence, hiring and retention, and grown-up culture conversations, all usable the same day. No theory. No paperwork museums. No advice that only works in big HR departments with unlimited budgets. This is also a permission slip to lead like a human. Clear standards. Fair boundaries. Decent communication. Less drama. The goal is a calmer workplace, fewer sleepless nights, and a team that actually wants to stick around. And yes, Hazel the office dog pops up too. Because nothing says "people management" quite like a judgmental stare from a Wellbeing Officer who's never written a policy in her life. ☕ Start here: take the FREE HR Health Check and see where your risks and your quick wins are hiding. New episodes every Tuesday.