Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

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Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 1 of 8

Dispute resolution guidance session

Submission details

Candidate’s name Phone no.

Assessor’s name Phone no.

Assessment site

Assessment date/s Time/s

The assessment task is due on the date specified by your assessor. Any variations to this

arrangement must be approved in writing by your assessor.

Submit this document with any required evidence attached. See specifications below for

details.

Performance objective

You will demonstrate the skills and knowledge required to manage difficulties and

conflicts in order to achieve positive work outcomes.

Assessment description

Using the simulated business information provided, and in response to a scenario, you

will plan and conduct a role-play in which you provide a colleague with guidance regarding

a dispute between the colleague and a member of their team. You will then develop an

action plan in consultation with the colleague.

Procedure

1. Read the scenario and role-play information in Appendix 1.

2. Review and familiarise yourself with the JKL Industries simulated business

documentation, including strategic plans and operational plans. Note what the

organisation does, how it does it, what its goals and objectives are, and who its

stakeholders and customers are.

3. Plan to lead a role-played guidance session for a peer manager in response to the

scenario.

4. Complete the first activity in the action plan template provided in Appendix 2.

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 2 of 8

5. Plan how you will:

a. Build trust with your colleague through assuming a calm, professional and

emotionally receptive attitude and demeanour.

b. Adjust your personal communication style appropriately to meet the needs

(both emotional and technical) of your colleague.

c. Discuss relevant grievance policies and procedures for resolving conflict in

accordance with organisational and legislative requirements.

d. Discuss strategies for identifying root causes of conflict and for resolving the

conflict.

e. Collaborate with your colleague to develop an action plan (completing the one

from Appendix 2 you have already begun to implement by leading this

session), including at least three actions your colleague to take to resolve the

issue with their employee.

6. Arrange a time and place with your assessor to participate in the role-play.

7. Perform your role-play in accordance with the specifications set out below.

8. Submit your completed action plan within the agreed timeframe.

Specifications

You must:

● participate in a guidance session role-play

● submit an action plan.

Your assessor will be looking for evidence of your ability to:

● provide leadership through your own behaviour, including:

○ professional conduct that promotes trust with internal and external contacts

○ adjusting own interpersonal communication style to meet the organisation’s

cultural diversity and ethical environment

● develop and/or implement processes and systems to manage difficulties, including:

○ identifying and resolving conflicts and other difficulties according to

organisational policies and procedures

○ planning how to address difficulties

○ providing guidance, counselling and support to assist co-workers in resolving

their work difficulties.

● explain and discuss procedures for conflict resolution

● discuss relevant legislation

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 3 of 8

● interact with others through:

○ adapting your personal communication style to model behaviour and build

trust and positive working relationships

○ playing a lead role in situations requiring effective collaboration

● get the work done through:

○ taking responsibility for planning in collaboration with others

○ developing action plans

● demonstrate writing skills through preparing action plans that incorporate

appropriate vocabulary, grammatical structure and conventions.

Adjustment for distance-based learners

● No changes to the assessment procedure or specification are required.

● The role-play may be conducted via video or teleconferencing.

● Documentation may be submitted electronically.

● A follow-up interview may be required (at the discretion of the assessor).

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 4 of 8

Appendix 1: Scenario – JKL Industries

JKL Industries overview

JKL Industries is an Australian-owned company, selling forklifts, small trucks and spare

parts to industry. They also have a division that leases forklifts and small trucks.

The company’s head office is in Sydney and has branches in Brisbane, Melbourne, Perth,

Adelaide and Canberra.

Change

After 12 years in business, focusing on forklifts and small trucks, JKL Industries has

negotiated the sales rights to a range of medium and large trucks from an overseas

supplier. This opportunity will provide JKL Industries with an advantage in range over its

competitors.

Sales results over the past five years have indicated strong growth in forklift and truck

sales, which have averaged 10% sales growth per annum. The rental market has been in

decline for the past three years due to the reduced costs of these vehicles and some

taxation benefits to industries who purchase these vehicles.

Taking the sales rights opportunity will, however, entail some significant changes,

including significant changes to the current organisational structure. The company will

reposition itself to focus solely on retail sales and service and exit the rentals market, in

which forces such as competition and consumer choice reduce potential profitability.

In accordance with the organisation’s values, JKL Industries intends (to the extent

feasible) to recruit from within the company and up-skill or re-skill existing employees

presently working in rentals who wish to remain with the company.

Given the company’s previous history of employee grievances over pay and conditions

and current plans to restructure, JKL Industries has identified poor communications and

an organisational climate of conflict as a risk to business goals.

Moving forward, the organisation intends to build and maintain a positive organisational

culture, reduce risk and achieve organisational goals through:

● developing an effective policy framework for managing internal communications

and consultation, in accordance with organisational objectives, business ethics,

and compliance requirements

● communicating and building support for organisational initiatives and objectives

● managing information flow to:

○ provide managers and employees with at-hand information to perform their

work responsibilities

○ communicate ideas for improvement (top-down and bottom-up)

○ facilitate feedback both to and from employees and management on relevant

work performance and outcomes of consultation.

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 5 of 8

Role-play information: HR Business Partner

You are an HR Business Partner working in the JKL Industries Brisbane branch. You report

directly to the HR Manager in the Sydney Head Office. As an employee of the Brisbane

branch, you also report to the Brisbane Branch Manager. You work to provide information

to employees, team leaders and managers at the branch, facilitate service delivery

through HR centres of excellence, such as compliance and training and development, and

partner with managers to assist them in strategising, workforce planning and

development, and in meeting the needs of their customers, employees and the business

as a whole.

A peer manager (from Rentals) has made an appointment to come to you about an

employee grievance.

Employee grievance

A rental employee of the Brisbane branch is concerned about plans to restructure the

business. The employee is extremely angry and feels that they:

● will definitely lose their job as a result of the restructure

● will not be given the opportunity to retrain.

They would like to formally complain that their manager has not provided rental

employees with opportunities to retrain.

In addition, the employee feels they must be underpaid because they know people in

the same job in the same industry who are making much more. They don’t understand

the basis of their pay or conditions.

Finally, the employee is currently organising other rental and sales employees for a

possible strike. They intend to pressure their union into supporting and publicising the

strike.

You know that the Rentals Manager is very concerned about the impact of the grievance

on team cohesion and, potentially, the goals and objectives of the organisation. You also

suspect that the manager will be hurt or angry themselves, as they have indicated their

sincere desire to improve employee relations within their team through better

communication and relationship-building.

The trouble is that while the manager may have the best intentions, they are relatively

inexperienced and may not be approaching the conflict with the most productive mindset.

And they may not have all the conflict resolution tools, tactics and strategies that you are

equipped with as a more experienced HR specialist.

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 6 of 8

In addition, you are aware of the following facts:

● JKL Industries’ firm policy and intention is to retrain rental employees to retain

talent (retraining is in JKL’s interest).

● So far the employee has adhered to the grievance policy as intended by the

organisation. The grievance procedure sets out a process whereby disputes are

kept at the lowest level. Employees should take their grievance first to their

immediate supervisor, which the employee has done. This gives managers the first

opportunity to respond appropriately, which is only fair. The Rentals Manager now

has an opportunity to resolve the dispute early.

● The employee is paid to the terms of the relevant modern award

(MA000089 Vehicle Manufacturing, Repair, Services and Retail Award 2010), but

that all employees will soon be able to negotiate possibly much better pay and

conditions in upcoming enterprise bargaining.

In your meeting with the Rentals Manager to provide guidance, lead the meeting through

the following stages:

1. greeting the manager

2. listening to their side

3. responding to the manager appropriately

4. working with the manager to come up with viable solutions

5. documenting activities in an action plan.

You will also, as appropriate:

● listen to the manager: understand the facts as they see them and understand their

feelings

● adopt an appropriate leadership/communication style

● be reflective, regulate your emotions, and refrain from reacting

● explain the facts as you understand them, including providing an explanation of the

grievance policy, its benefit to the organisation, and the relevance of at least one

piece of legislation

● help the manager to understand reasons for the grievance

○ Note: Given the climate of fear and suspicion that has existed within JKL

Industries, such a grievance may not be very unlikely. It is also possible that

plain communications of facts and organisational intentions may have failed

because of the underlying emotional work context. As such, the complaint

should not necessarily be a cause of offense.

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 7 of 8

● using your knowledge of dispute resolution, collaborate with the manager to

determine a series of at least three activities to resolve the conflict with the

employee and complete an action plan (use the template provided in Appendix 2)

● offer to mediate in the dispute, if required, or help to provide assistance if it

requires further escalation.

Given the company’s industrial relations history and restructure plans, and history of

conflict and mistrust, contributing to positive employee relationship-building through

assisting managers will constitute a key measure of your value to the organisation.

Assessment Task 3 BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships

BSBLDR502 Lead and manage effective workplace relationships 1st edition version: 1

© 2015 Innovation and Business Industry Skills Council Ltd Page 8 of 8

Appendix 2: Action plan template

Action/activity Timeframe Person/s responsible Description of strategy/

tactic/rationale for action

Resources, if required

HR meeting with manager

(rental)

HR Business Partner

(you)