London Sales Recruitment News

  • Remote working 'can be very beneficial'
    07/02/2012
    Encouraging remote working could be useful to companies from both a staff retention and flexibility point of view, and ultimately from a financial perspective, one expert has noted.
  • Job opportunities rise in January
    02/02/2012
    The number of new job positions being created across the UK rose in January, the latest Reed Job Index has revealed.
  • Younger workers 'value training over pay'
    30/01/2012
    The country's younger workers deem training opportunities and the promise of a good work/life balance as more important then cash bonuses, according to a new report by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
  • Soft skills 'can be more important than qualifications'
    27/01/2012
    Having so-called 'soft skills' in the workplace can be even more beneficial than an array of academic achievements, one specialist has explained.
  • Anonymous CV scheme 'a step closer'
    23/01/2012
    A new government scheme to ensure the nation's businesses only choose workers based on their skills and suitability for the job, rather than their social background, has taken a step closer after 100 major employers signed up to it.

24% do not believe equal pay audits are necessary

Research shows nearly one in four companies believe equal pay audits are unnecessary for removing the wages gap, a source reveals.

A study by Industrial Relations Services finds 75 per cent of companies including those employing people in sales jobs are taking some action to try and correct the pay gap, Personnel Today states.

The report suggests this is usually undertaken informally and claims 60 per cent do not believe equal pay audits should be mandatory.

Of the firms which have submitted themselves to an audit, 69 per cent were found to have paid men more than women for work of equal value.

The study suggests where this was detected, few companies took steps to reduce this.

Noelle Murphy, its author, claims while workers are entitled to equal pay in law, businesses are not meeting this obligation.

"Employers do not seem motivated to proactively address pay inequality within their organisations," she says.

Psychologies Magazine recently published a survey which found 75 to 80 per cent of women were working in a job and its editor, Maureen Rice, said "that's not going to change".

Aaron Wallis offer hundreds of sales jobs together with some of the most comprehensive sales tips and career advice available to UK sales jobseekers. Achieve the sales career you deserve.ADNFCR-1617-ID-18821686-ADNFCR

Filed: 10-10-2008

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