March 2026 Blue Tree HR Solutions Newsletter

   

How an HR budget will save you money this year

Most businesses say they don’t have an HR budget.

What they usually mean is that they don’t have a planned one.

In reality, most businesses are already spending money on HR. They just don’t think of it that way.

HR costs tend to show up reactively. A grievance that needs handling. An investigation that takes up management time. External advice brought in once something has already escalated.

By the time these costs become visible, they’re often higher than expected and harder to control.

What we’re seeing more of is business owners stepping back and asking a simple question:

“What has HR actually cost us over the last year?”

When you add up things like grievances, disciplinaries, management time, sickness linked to unresolved issues and recruitment after avoidable exits, you’d be surprised how it mounts up.

If you haven’t already, set aside 30 minutes this month to add up what HR has really cost your business. Most businesses have never done that and it’s usually an eye-opener.

For many businesses, redirecting a small part of that reactive spend into more proactive HR support is enough to reduce risk, save money and give managers more confidence day to day.

If you’d like help with reviewing your current HR spend or planning a more proactive HR budget, we can help you to talk it through and sense check the numbers.

And if you’d like the full detail, including how to spot hidden HR costs and understand what proactive HR support looks like in practice, get in touch for a copy of our latest guide on creating an HR budget.

What one company did to tackle loneliness at work and why it worked

A Swedish company has trialled a “friendship hour”, giving employees paid time to socialise, with staff reporting that they felt happier and less isolated.

The initiative was introduced to tackle workplace loneliness, particularly during the darker winter months when wellbeing often dips. The trial shows that simple, human-focused interventions can have a real impact.

Food for thought: wellbeing doesn’t always need formal programmes, sometimes creating space for connection is enough.

Government-backed training highlights the role managers play in preventing long-term sickness

Earlier this year, the government funded free occupational health training to 5,000 line managers in small businesses, aimed at helping them to spot early signs that someone might be struggling, such as ongoing fatigue, changes in behaviour or rising absence.

With long-term sickness now affecting millions of workers and costing businesses thousands per employee, the initiative highlights a familiar pattern: absence problems often get worse because conversations happen too late or managers don’t feel confident starting them.

While the results of this initiative are yet to be announced, the message will feel familiar to many business owners. Absence management works best when issues are picked up early, conversations happen sooner rather than later and managers know when to step in before a situation becomes long-term or costly.

What to do when an employee is arrested

Learning that an employee has been arrested can feel alarming, but acting too quickly can create unnecessary risk. An arrest is not the same as a charge or a conviction and many cases go no further.

The key is proportionality: understand where things are in the legal process, consider whether it’s relevant to the role and respond calmly with the right policies and conversations in place.

Recruit or reorganise?

Employing people is getting more expensive.

Not just salary, but the wider costs and obligations that come with being an employer, especially with the Employment Rights Act coming into force.

When work increases and your people feel stretched, the instinct is to hire.

That reaction makes sense. But with rising employment costs, payroll forecasting now needs more thought than it used to.

Every new hire is a long-term cost, not a short-term fix.

Before recruiting, it’s worth stopping and asking:

“Do we actually have a resourcing issue or a structure one?”

In many businesses, roles have grown organically. Work has been added on. Responsibilities overlap. Skilled people are spread thin or doing work that no longer makes sense.

The capability is often already there, just not structured properly.

Stepping back to look at organisation design can be a quicker, cheaper and more effective way to create capacity than recruiting straight away.

If you would benefit from an external pair of experienced eyes to review your situation, get in touch and we can talk it through.

Q&A

Can I ask staff to share their work location if they are working remotely?

Yes, as long as there’s a clear business reason. For example, health and safety, data security or knowing where people are working for operational reasons. Be clear about why you’re asking and avoid collecting more information than you actually need.

What should I do if an employee refuses to complete mandatory training?

Start by understanding why they’re refusing. If the training is genuinely mandatory for the role (for safety, legal or operational reasons), make that clear and give them a reasonable opportunity to complete it. If they still refuse, it may become a conduct or performance issue that needs to be managed formally.

Can I tell staff they cannot bring their personal phone on to the shop floor or job site?

Yes. You can set reasonable rules around personal phones at work, especially for safety, security or productivity reasons. Make sure the rule is clear, applied consistently and allows for exceptions where appropriate, such as emergencies.

HR support for small businesses: A cost-effective solution for compliance and efficiency

2024 went by fast and in 2025, we are all about saving you and your small businesses time!

At Blue Tree HR Solutions we understand the complexities and struggles in regards to HR support for small businesses. And we as a team understand the importance of compliance regulations and the headache that comes with the time-consuming administration within small companies. Whether retained HR services are required or an ad hoc HR consultant is necessary, we treat every client and issue with the utmost importance and security.

Hopefully using this blog we will give you a greater understanding of what we can offer, in terms of HR support for small businesses. And how we can assist with every HR question, advice or documentation. Small businesses are the heart of our business and we believe the people are what makes them so amazing to work for.

Whether via phone, email or face-to-face meetings, at Blue Tree HR Solutions, we are here to offer flexibility to your every HR need!

 

Compliance risks

As experts in HR support for small businesses, with over 20 years of experience and a consistently high-performance history, we understand the significant importance of accuracy when following compliance regulations.

Whether using us as a freelance HR consultant, for advice on accuracy or the development of documents, or using us as a retained member for all HR requirements. We will ensure all provisional contracts and documents are formed with accuracy and follow all requirements necessary. While also ensuring that matters of grievance and disciplinaries are followed with insurance of legality and ethics while supporting management through communication and advice.

Time consuming tasks

At Blue Tree Hr Solutions we offer the alternative of outsourcing HR whether the job is big or small, we take things off your hands and ensure that you can save yourself valuable time and effort. Whether a one-time use, occasional use or full-time HR management, we take the time to dot the I’s and draw the T’s.

As a freelance HR consultant, this often allows a more cost-effective alternative to an in-house HR department, we offer one-time uses and freelance HR support for small businesses, with expertise in advice and the provision of policies.

Limited resources

As a versatile company that works with a variety of companies of a variety of sizes, we understand that some small businesses may not have the budget or workforce to dedicate to an internal department of HR. This is how we, as a company, can offer HR support for a small business, with a freelance HR consultant, we’re able to offer flexible services on your terms, leading to a more cost-effective solution.

We understand that it is easy for a small business to become overwhelmed with the string of HR documentation and evolving compliance laws. We offer a solution that allows your company to be focused on your needs, whilst we take care of HR support and ensure complete accuracy and time-saving flexibility.

Expertise

With over 20 years of experience and heavy expertise in HR support for small businesses, we’re able to offer you our knowledge and understanding with any HR query you may have. From employee handbooks and policies to supporting management and recruitment onboarding, we’re able to offer a cost-effective solution to the standard in-house departments that a small business may not have the resources to offer.

Not only are we cost-effective and versatile, but we also enable your company to take control of your valuable time and ensure that you retain accurate and in-depth knowledge when needing advice and support.

 

Contact us for expert HR support for small businesses

If you would like more information on why our services are important for your business, check out our blog on “Why is HR advice for small businesses important?” For more information on our services, contact us now.