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Staff monitoring

Employers commonly monitor employees’ behaviour in the workplace to ensure that rules are not being broken and employees are acting appropriately while representing the employer.

Common methods of monitoring staff include recording employees’ activities on CCTV, checking emails, listening to voicemails and monitoring telephone conversations.

Employers should inform employees that monitoring is taking place, how data is being collected, how the data will be securely processed and the purpose for which the data will be used. Employee will usually be entitled to see data that has been collected about them. In exceptional circumstances, the organisation may use monitoring covertly (for example, to catch a thief).


    • Case law
    • Employment law
    • Staff monitoring

    Covert surveillance justified

    by Eversheds HR Group 16 Nov 2004
    by Eversheds HR Group 16 Nov 2004

    Covert surveillance justifiedMcGowan v Scottish Water, EAT, 23 September 2004Scottish Water became suspicious that Mr McGowan, a worker at a...

    • Employment law
    • Latest News
    • HR practice

    Sainsbury’s staff slam ‘Shining Stars’ reward scheme

    by dan thomas 21 Oct 2004
    by dan thomas 21 Oct 2004

    Sainsbury’s staff have reportedly criticised a plan to reward them with ‘gold stars’.The move is one of a number of...

    • Employee relations
    • Employment law
    • Employee communications

    A different mindset

    by Antony Adshead 14 Sep 2004
    by Antony Adshead 14 Sep 2004

    Why measurement of performance is key to managing your mobile workers.

    While mobile and remote working is increasingly common –...

    • Employment law
    • Discipline
    • HR practice

    Where to draw the line

    by Liz Hall 1 Jun 2004
    by Liz Hall 1 Jun 2004

    Employers must strike a balance between keeping an eye on poor performance and protecting the employees' rightto privacy if monitoring policies are to work. Liz Hall reports

    • Employee relations
    • Employment law
    • Data protection

    Sniffing out the evidence

    by DeeDee Doke 11 May 2004
    by DeeDee Doke 11 May 2004

    Sherlock
    Holmes and a whole pack of sniffer dogs would be little use in the fight
    against ‘cyber-crime’. But fortunately,...

    • Employment law
    • Ethics
    • HR practice

    Mental block on values

    by Stephen Overell 11 May 2004
    by Stephen Overell 11 May 2004

    Companies' desire to control employee behaviour has been wrapped in corporate jargon. But what happens to the misfits?

    • Alcohol and drug misuse
    • Employment law
    • Health and safety

    Sky high

    by Simon Kent 1 Apr 2004
    by Simon Kent 1 Apr 2004

    Introducing a drug and alcohol abuse policy will not be straightforward as employees are wary of their justification, but it...

    • Employment law
    • Data protection
    • HR practice

    E is for evidence

    by Keith Rodgers 23 Mar 2004
    by Keith Rodgers 23 Mar 2004

    Company e-mails are increasingly turning up in court as evidence in litigation cases. To help employers protect themselves, HR must ensure that company e-mail policies are watertight.

    • Assessment
    • Employment law
    • HR practice

    It’s the way we work… not the people

    by Personnel Today 16 Mar 2004
    by Personnel Today 16 Mar 2004

    John Seddon argues that command and control cultures are failing organisations and that HR should drive forward new ways of working

    • Assessment
    • Employment law
    • HR practice

    Turning appraisals 360 degrees

    by Nathalie Towner 17 Feb 2004
    by Nathalie Towner 17 Feb 2004

    Nathalie Towner looks at how an online 360-degree feedback system helped transform the appraisal process at AAH Pharmaceuticals

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Personnel Today
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