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Be Clear and Concise When You Hire
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| Guest post by: Marijo McCarthy |
Article Overview: A client called me recently to tell me his company was growing and that he needed to re-hire some employees he had laid off at the beginning of 2009. Given his current growth and the possibility of additional expansion in 2010, he thought it was time to brush off the company's hiring letter and discuss the use of a non-disclosure agreement for key employees.
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Be Clear and Concise When You Hire
A client called me recently to tell me his company was growing and that he needed to re-hire some employees he had laid off at the beginning of 2009. Given his current growth and the possibility of additional expansion in 2010, he thought it was time to brush off the company's hiring letter and discuss the use of a non-disclosure agreement for key employees.
Good news, I thought, particularly in this economy.
Plus, he was to be commended for thinking ahead and focusing on how best to articulate the employment and benefit terms for his re-hires.
When he sent along his current hiring letter, it was immediately clear that some updating was in order. On first review, three red flags jumped out:
The offer letter referred to "employment contract." Uh oh! My client had no intention of offering an employment contract to a new employee. Rather, he contemplated "at will" employment and had simply overlooked the implications of these words in the draft.
As a fix, the first sentence of the letter might read: "We are pleased to confirm our offer to you of at-will employment in the position of XXX."
The offer letter referred to employee benefits which included "80% employer-paid health insurance." While the company does indeed currently provide such benefits, what happens if it needs to cut that back to a lesser percentage in the future? Particularly given the annual, double-digit increase in the cost of this benefit that we are all experiencing, my client ought to reserve the right to adjust the amount going forward.
The solution here would be another sentence: "Health care benefits are included with a current company contribution of 80%, although benefit policies and contribution levels are subject to change, at the discretion of the company."
The offer letter made employment contingent on the employee signing a "non-disclosure agreement to be provided in the future." Hmm! I could see that we needed to get that nondisclosure agreement drafted post-haste and make it an attachment to the offer letter.
Here, we might add a final sentence which reads: "You will be required to sign the non-disclosure, confidentiality, and non-solicit agreement which is attached to this offer, as you will be privy to sensitive business information belonging to both the company and the company's clients in the ordinary course of carrying out your duties."
Remember, as with every other document you sign, an offer of employment is a contract (although as stated earlier, not necessarily an employment contract!). So handle it carefully.
A well-drafted, updated offer of employment will set the stage for your company's policies and procedures, and let the applicant know that the company makes those policies and procedures clear from day one. A poorly-drafted offer letter, by contrast — one that is filled with misinformation and ambiguous promises — can only lead to trouble down the road.
If you do one thing for your company before 2010 begins, pull out those hiring documents, dust them off and get ready for the first new employee of the coming year!
Related ArticlesArticle Tags: contract, employee, hire, nondisclosure agreement
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About the Author: Marijo McCarthy RSS for Marijo's articles - Visit Marijo's website Marijo McCarthy is principal of Widett and McCarthy, a Boston-area law firm that helps small business owners grow their businesses with pragmatic legal advice, mentoring and a solid team of professional advisors. Click here to visit Marijo's website Contracts Contracts Contracts Read Em Well Lets face it employee wages are sacrosanct Employee vs Independent Contractor Ignore This at Your Peril Credit May Be King but Cash Trumps Kings Every Time Complying with the New Data Security Law |
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