Hi Seniors,
Recently, I joined a civil company as an HR Manager. Here, people don't have an idea about body language or even dress codes. Even if I educate them, they have ego problems and get angry, but my CEO insists that I educate them in these areas. As a female manager, what should I do? Kindly suggest.
Regards, Mahi
From India, Coimbatore
Recently, I joined a civil company as an HR Manager. Here, people don't have an idea about body language or even dress codes. Even if I educate them, they have ego problems and get angry, but my CEO insists that I educate them in these areas. As a female manager, what should I do? Kindly suggest.
Regards, Mahi
From India, Coimbatore
Dear Ms. Mahi,
In the Indian context, female employees have limited responsibilities to handle/manage unless it's the IT/ITES/BPO industry or educational institutions where there is not much gender discrimination as most of the employees are educated (graduates), promoting an optimistic approach at the workplace. However, it is quite different in the construction/civil industry.
I suggest you hire a professional trainer and educate them on work culture, workplace ethics, body language, interpersonal relationships, and personal grooming. It won't cost you much, but I prefer a male trainer to handle this assignment for better productivity. If you are interested, please let me know, and I will suggest a good trainer.
With profound regards,
From India, Chennai
In the Indian context, female employees have limited responsibilities to handle/manage unless it's the IT/ITES/BPO industry or educational institutions where there is not much gender discrimination as most of the employees are educated (graduates), promoting an optimistic approach at the workplace. However, it is quite different in the construction/civil industry.
I suggest you hire a professional trainer and educate them on work culture, workplace ethics, body language, interpersonal relationships, and personal grooming. It won't cost you much, but I prefer a male trainer to handle this assignment for better productivity. If you are interested, please let me know, and I will suggest a good trainer.
With profound regards,
From India, Chennai
Mahi,
Gender is not an issue here. In fact, when a female speaks, people listen and follow scrupulously. Organize a meeting to explain the discipline to be maintained and the dress code. Make a circular to this effect.
Pon
From India, Lucknow
Gender is not an issue here. In fact, when a female speaks, people listen and follow scrupulously. Organize a meeting to explain the discipline to be maintained and the dress code. Make a circular to this effect.
Pon
From India, Lucknow
Hi Mahi,
I agree with Pon here. Please draft a suitable dress code policy as per the requirements and mention details about what is formal dressing, with examples. Then organize a meeting and explain the benefits of a proper dress code.
For body language, I think the best approach would be to train them through a professional trainer, as it is something they will need to learn over a period of time. You cannot expect overnight changes in the workforce.
Regards,
From India, Delhi
I agree with Pon here. Please draft a suitable dress code policy as per the requirements and mention details about what is formal dressing, with examples. Then organize a meeting and explain the benefits of a proper dress code.
For body language, I think the best approach would be to train them through a professional trainer, as it is something they will need to learn over a period of time. You cannot expect overnight changes in the workforce.
Regards,
From India, Delhi
Hello Mahi,
I am not sure what you mean by 'body language' in the given context.
Also, the focus/importance on the 'body language' [as it's understood generally] is NOT UNIFORM across all functions/sectors--for example, a marketing person may need to have a lot more of 'proper body language' than one who is in, let's say, the Accounts function.
Also, your usage of the words 'civil company' for describing your organization is a bit confusing--is it into Construction OR civil design OR Infrastructure, etc.--hope you get what I mean, since there are a whole host of areas where Civil engineering is the mainstay.
Regarding ensuring some sort of a dress code is followed, while a Formal Policy will definitely have to come to ensure uniformity in understanding & implementation, I am NOT SO SURE if starting the whole implementation with the Policy WILL WORK. Given the type of responses/reactions you seem to be facing, the policy could be counter-productive--UNTIL you handle the 'ego' part of the staff: HOW would be the key.
I can see 2 ways to handle this issue:
1] I am not sure of the sort of support you get from your CEO--apart from 'telling' you to educate the staff. If any policy has to be the Starting point, it has to come from the CEO & as HR, you need to implement it--that way, everyone will be clear about WHO is interested in this policy & also that you are just implementing it. The meeting that Pon & Archna suggested will then work very well to formulate the policy--since the chain-of-instruction is clear to all. The way I get it is this [hoping I am wrong]: your CEO is trying to fire from your shoulder--since, for whatever reasons, he doesn't want to use his/her own.
2] If the support you can expect from your CEO is, to say the least, very Minimal, then I suggest you DON'T TALK of any policies AT ALL to begin with. And also, NEVER EVER give the impression that you are EDUCATING them--first of all, you are new here & added to it, you realized only later about their 'ego' issues. I see a clear message in their 'anger': Who are you to teach/tell us NOW when we are living like this in this company without any remark from the CEO all these days/years?
The only way I can see you succeed [without your CEO's support/direct involvement] is to first endear yourself to them & only then raise the issues where you are not getting cooperation now, but would like to.
HOW? Frankly, I would leave this open to debate, since the right workable advice for this query could need many other inputs from your end depending on the thought(s)/suggestion(s) the members of this Forum may come up with.
Rgds,
TS
From India, Hyderabad
I am not sure what you mean by 'body language' in the given context.
Also, the focus/importance on the 'body language' [as it's understood generally] is NOT UNIFORM across all functions/sectors--for example, a marketing person may need to have a lot more of 'proper body language' than one who is in, let's say, the Accounts function.
Also, your usage of the words 'civil company' for describing your organization is a bit confusing--is it into Construction OR civil design OR Infrastructure, etc.--hope you get what I mean, since there are a whole host of areas where Civil engineering is the mainstay.
Regarding ensuring some sort of a dress code is followed, while a Formal Policy will definitely have to come to ensure uniformity in understanding & implementation, I am NOT SO SURE if starting the whole implementation with the Policy WILL WORK. Given the type of responses/reactions you seem to be facing, the policy could be counter-productive--UNTIL you handle the 'ego' part of the staff: HOW would be the key.
I can see 2 ways to handle this issue:
1] I am not sure of the sort of support you get from your CEO--apart from 'telling' you to educate the staff. If any policy has to be the Starting point, it has to come from the CEO & as HR, you need to implement it--that way, everyone will be clear about WHO is interested in this policy & also that you are just implementing it. The meeting that Pon & Archna suggested will then work very well to formulate the policy--since the chain-of-instruction is clear to all. The way I get it is this [hoping I am wrong]: your CEO is trying to fire from your shoulder--since, for whatever reasons, he doesn't want to use his/her own.
2] If the support you can expect from your CEO is, to say the least, very Minimal, then I suggest you DON'T TALK of any policies AT ALL to begin with. And also, NEVER EVER give the impression that you are EDUCATING them--first of all, you are new here & added to it, you realized only later about their 'ego' issues. I see a clear message in their 'anger': Who are you to teach/tell us NOW when we are living like this in this company without any remark from the CEO all these days/years?
The only way I can see you succeed [without your CEO's support/direct involvement] is to first endear yourself to them & only then raise the issues where you are not getting cooperation now, but would like to.
HOW? Frankly, I would leave this open to debate, since the right workable advice for this query could need many other inputs from your end depending on the thought(s)/suggestion(s) the members of this Forum may come up with.
Rgds,
TS
From India, Hyderabad
Dear Mahi,
As per Ms. Archana's instruction, please create a circular for the Dress Code as a part of the HR Policy. Obtain approval for the draft from your CEO/MD/GM and maintain a fair Dress Code Policy letter. Keep the draft dress code policy in the file. If someone questions you, you can show it as a requirement from Management, and explain that you have implemented it as per their direction. This approach will help prevent any conflicts.
Following Mr. Sateesh's advice, refrain from solely educating yourself. Instead, consider organizing training programs in 2 or 3 sessions for all employees. Such training sessions can significantly impact employee behavior positively.
Avoid taking on all tasks at once. Focus on completing one task at a time, and success will follow.
Wishing you all the best.
From India, Kumbakonam
As per Ms. Archana's instruction, please create a circular for the Dress Code as a part of the HR Policy. Obtain approval for the draft from your CEO/MD/GM and maintain a fair Dress Code Policy letter. Keep the draft dress code policy in the file. If someone questions you, you can show it as a requirement from Management, and explain that you have implemented it as per their direction. This approach will help prevent any conflicts.
Following Mr. Sateesh's advice, refrain from solely educating yourself. Instead, consider organizing training programs in 2 or 3 sessions for all employees. Such training sessions can significantly impact employee behavior positively.
Avoid taking on all tasks at once. Focus on completing one task at a time, and success will follow.
Wishing you all the best.
From India, Kumbakonam
Looking for something specific? - Join & Be Part Of Our Community and get connected with the right people who can help. Our AI-powered platform provides real-time fact-checking, peer-reviewed insights, and a vast historical knowledge base to support your search.