Skip to main content
We’re here with practical IT information for your business. Access comprehensive IT resources and more.

Search

How to choose the right computer equipment for your business to increase your productivity and efficiency without it costing the earth.

Business software helps you complete a range of tasks. Choose the right software, provide support and train your staff with our introduction.

It is highly likely that you depend on the internet for some aspects of your business. Find out how you can use the internet more effectively.

Good communication with customers, partners and suppliers is vital for business success. This summary explores business communication methods.

How would you cope if your IT system failed or was breached? We cover the main IT security issues and how to protect against them.

Good IT management can help you choose, use and implement IT. Our overview helps you manage IT in a way that maximises the return on your investment.

IT support is vital if you rely on your IT system. But how can you set up an effective safety net in case things go wrong? We explore the options.

Getting the right IT is just the first step. Appropriate training, policies and working practices can help you maximise return on your IT investment.

Zero hours workers to get more say over their hours

7 February 2023

The government is backing a new law that gives all workers the legal right to request a predictable working pattern, intended to eradicate the "one-sided flexibility" that favours employers in zero hours contracts.

The government has announced that it is supporting the Workers (Predictable Terms and Conditions) Bill, which will bring positive changes for tens of millions of UK workers. The move, which would apply to all workers and employees including agency workers, comes after Matthew Taylor's 2017 review of modern working practices found that many workers on zero hours contracts experience "one-sided flexibility".

Many workers operating under zero hours contracts are expected to remain available to their employer for shifts even though there are no guarantees that they will be offered work. The government says that "with a more predictable working pattern, workers will have a guarantee of when they are required to work, with hours that work for them".

If a worker's existing working pattern lacks certainty in terms of the hours they work, the times they work or if it is a fixed-term contract for less than 12 months, they will be able to make a formal application to change their working pattern to make it more predictable.

"Employers having one-sided flexibility over their staff is unfair and unreasonable. This Bill will ensure workers can request more predictable working patterns where they want them, so they can get on with their daily lives." Kevin Hollinrake, labour markets minister.

The move is one of a number of policies designed to further workers' rights across the country, such as:

  • Supporting parents of babies who need neonatal additional care with paid neonatal care leave;
  • Requiring employers to ensure that all tips, gratuities and service charges received are paid to workers in full;
  • Offering pregnant women and new parents greater protection against redundancy;
  • Providing millions of employees with a day one right to request flexible working, and a greater say over when, where, and how they work.

To be eligible for this new right, workers and employees must have worked for their employer for a set period (expected to be 26 weeks) before they can submit their application. However, given that the proposals aim to support those with unpredictable contracts, workers will not have had to have worked continuously during that period.

Employers do have the option to refuse a request for a more predictable working pattern on specific grounds, such as the burden of additional costs to make changes, or there being insufficient work at times when the employee proposes to work. Workers will be able to make up to two requests a year.

Written by Rachel Miller.

Stay up-to-date with business advice and news

Sign up to this lively and colourful newsletter for new and more established small businesses.

Contact us

Make an enquiry