Anonymous
1

Dear Seniors,
We have an Employee working in Organization as a fulltime Executive on Payroll of the company, but at the same time he working as a agent and sending the company's employee to other organization and earning commission and HR has to face the problem for recruiting new employees every-time.
What Action company should take on him??
New Suggestion from Senior
Thank you
Ravish

From India, Surat
umakanthan53
6016

Dear Ravish,
Double employment is generally prohibited. Particularly, when it is indirectly used by a regular employee against the interest of the Company, there should not be any hesitation to deal with him sternly.So try to collect concrete evidence behind his back, and put up a note to the C.E.O. At times some influential employees use their French Connection for their succesful surreptitious extra engagements like the one you mentioned.So be careful in your approach to the issue.

From India, Salem
rdma001
1

Dear Umakanthan.M
I really appreciate your response
But My Point is Company Employee is sending Manpower out of the company and earning commission from the employee salary
For Example:
Mr. A is HOD and working in Company Name "XYZ" Now HR Dept. recruiting best manpower according to his requirement for his department. But after few month i.e. quarterly his subordinates leave the job and this is repeating on every time... Now HR dept. found that Mr. A is sending the manpower of XYZ company to other companies and earning the huge commissions every month now here how to catch such persons red handed and what legal actions we as a company can take against him?.. so other department will not repeat same.
I hope its clear now
Please help
Awaiting for reply
Thank you
Regards
Ravish

From India, Surat
umakanthan53
6016

Dear Ravish,

Very well I have understood your point. Being the head of a particular department, the individual has the privilege to fix the number and prescribe the additional qualifications of the prospective personnel " saleable " and make indents to the HR as if they are required actually for his department. Maitain a secret log in this regard with the approval of the HOD of HRD and make entries in that relating to the periodicity of man-power indent placed by him, the no. of candidates required and their additional qualifications, if any repeatedly mentioned, if he also sits in the recruitment process the peculiarity or speciality of his approach to some candidates seemingly preferable to him, the actual cost of on-the-job training or orientation progrrame suggested and imparted by him to the freshers, the frequency of their leaving and the reasons cited by them, the list of companies they immediately join and the similarity or competitive nature of their operations to your company, the nature and position of the fresh appointments offered to the migrantrs, the nature of credentials if any suggested by him to be mentioned in the experience certificate to be issued to the resignees etc., and analyse them critically and if your preconceptions were correct certainly you can find a conspicuous pattern of similarity or uniformity in every case of such wilful exit. Unless and otherwise some reliable inside information in this regard, you would not have become suspecious of this "man-power hi-jack" of the individual. So, try to reduce his role in the matter of fresh appointments. As a first step for instance, in determining man-power requirement of every department, form a committee of senior executives of that particular dept along with its HOD. Prescribe a long tenure of bond period and reimbursemement of training cost together with interest and long notice period in case of premature or immediate resignations. If your C.E.O is a straight-forward and impartial person having no personal affinity with the individual, bring the entire surreptitious and illicit activities of the individual and its adverse impact on the organization to his notice in the most opportune moment. That's all what I can suggest!

From India, Salem
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