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Resources for Insurance Agencies and HR Executives who wish to grow their practice ...
Executive Info Kit


HR That Works Program
Private Label Program for Insurance Agencies

CONTACT:
Don Phin, President
800-234-3304
don@hrthatworks.com


Executive Summary The Scary Facts Frequently Asked Questions  
About Don Phin HR That Works Web Site References HR That Works Demo

What Others Are Saying:

"Superb, cutting edge material ... low on verbiage and high on readily applicable techniques."

Robert Bregman,
Senior Research Analyst,
Insurance Risk Management Institute



"The best guarantee of satisfied customers is building powerful relationships with your employees. This program will help you do just that!"

Janet C. Larson,
Executive Director,
Performance Zone



"Your message is very powerful. You cut straight to the truth of what's needed in organizations today."

William Scherer,
Chair,
The Executive Committee

Executive Summary

1.  HR That Works provides leadership, offering help every business needs — The human resources arena is a maturing and highly competitive specialty. HR executives have to help hire and retain great employees while avoiding employee lawsuits in the process.

[More: Employee lawsuits in a nutshell]

2. The Secret to Preventing Employee Lawsuits — The workplace gets riskier every day. The Employer Advisors Network, Inc. HR That Works ® program helps business clients insure compliance with the complex requirements of employment law so that they are unlikely to incur or lose a discrimination, sexual harassment or other employment case. Of course, defending a lawsuit can be an expensive proposition even if you win. The best service a program can provide business clients is the real secret to avoiding legal problems: powerful, positive employment relationships right from the day of hiring.  HR That Works is designed to help companies with 15 to 500 employees accomplish this simply and profitably.

[More: Keeping companies out of court]

3. Using Cyberspace Legal Strategies to Full Advantage — Don Phin became an Internet pioneer by devising a revolutionary new way to deliver the employment practices know-how, forms, information and strategies more effectively and economically via the World Wide Web. A key feature of the program is a growing nationwide network of attorneys, insurance agencies, HR consultants, attorneys and others uniquely equipped to advise and represent Employers.

More on HR That Works

4. How to Build Your Independant Practice — It's no secret that specialization is the road to professional success. But even the most knowledgeable HR practitioner can only reap the benefits of specialization if they have the support of ownership.

More: How to Become a Well Paid HR Executive

"The Employer Advisors Network program for the independent
agent is a marketing masterpiece!"

Ken Varga,
President,
Professional Buyers Guild

The Facts

1. Employee Lawsuits in a Nutshell — One out of five civil lawsuits is employment-related, according to insurance industry analysts, and a typical business is much more likely to be sued by a former employee than audited by the IRS. Employees win close to two thirds of cases, with damage awards averaging more than $250,000, and nonrecoverable expenses of legal defense averaging more than $100,000. Knowing how to avoid destructive employee lawsuits has become a vital skill for every business. At least four out of five legal actions by employees against employers fall into the categories of discrimination, wrongful termination or sexual harassment.

Employees are protected against discrimination based on race, creed, color, national origin, marital status, medical condition, sexual orientation or preference, religion, age, physical and/or mental disabilities or pregnancy under the following federal laws:

  • Title VII of the Civil Rights Law of 1964

  • Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967

  • Equal Pay Act

  • Rehabilitation Act of 1973

  • Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978

  • Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990

  • Older Workers Benefit Protection Act of 1990

  • Civil Rights Act of 1991

  • Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993

  • And many more!
Employment discrimination complaints can be filed either with the court system or with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) and its state equivalents.

More employees and their attorneys elect to bypass the EEOC hearing process and file their complaints in court, where money judgments can be much higher because of punitive damage awards. In addition, the high legal expenses of pretrial discovery, motions and trial make it more likely that the defendant employer will pay an out-of-court settlement even in a case where the company would probably not be found liable in a trial. Attorneys fees can easily cost more than $100,000 to defend a discrimination claim and the verdicts are staggering. Even a nuisance claim can easily cost $70,000 to settle.

Wrongful termination is one of the most common grounds for employee lawsuits. Even though the general rule is that employees can be fired at will — at any time, for any reason, with or without cause and with or without notice— the courts have recognized so many exceptions that they swallow the general rule. If an employer makes statements at the time of hiring an employee that can be construed as promises of permanent employment, for example, the court can find an implied contract protecting the employee from being fired at will. Since wrongful termination laws include "constructive discharge, " where the employee's work environment becomes so hostile that he or she is forced to resign for financial, physical or emotional well-being, wrongful termination often becomes an issue in sexual harassment, discrimination and whistle-blowing cases.

Sexual harassment lawsuits are among the most common and most lucrative cases in the legal system today, often resulting in punitive damage awards exceeding $1 million. They fall into two categories — "quid pro quo harassment" (where sexual contact is made a condition of employment) and "hostile environment harassment" (where verbal, visual or physical conduct of fellow employees creates an intimidating, hostile or offensive working environment). Even though the employer may have nothing to do with the harassment—and may not necessarily be aware of it--the business can be held liable for failing to prepare, distribute, publicize and enforce a written policy against sexual harassment, or for failing to educate employees about exactly what constitutes sexual harassment, or for failing to investigate complaints and take appropriate action.

Personnel forms and special reports designed to protect employers from charges of discrimination, wrongful termination, sexual harassment and other common employee lawsuits are available for members. Among the additional tools included in the HR That Works program is a Compliance Audit, which helps employers find out where they may be vulnerable to employee lawsuits and tells what steps they can take to protect themselves. Other compliance materials include training presentations, quizzes and complete forms, checklists and guidelines for investigating complaints.


Lawsuit Free!
How to Prevent Employee Lawsuits

"The Employer Advisors
Network provides an
incredible
cross-marketing
opportunity for our
insurance agent members.
It is an impressive model
that should greatly benefit
its members and their
growing clientele."

George Nordhaus,
President,
Insurance Marketing and Management Services

2. Keeping Companies Out of Court

"When I came out of law school," Don Phin recalls, "I figured I could be a hero by helping poor, victimized workers fight back against their abusive, villainous bosses. Grinding into the wee hours of the night is expected when you are playing the hero role. And sure, I made a lot of companies burn up a lot of money in legal fees and put six-figure settlements in my clients' pockets. But then one day the reality hit me: many of these clients blew the money within three years, just as lottery winners do. Is that what all my sacrificing was for?"

Don realized that he and thousands of other trial lawyers were creating a huge need for strategies and tools to help head off the kind of litigation that too often saps business and their managers of cash, time and energy. He devised ways to show employers how to take precautions against the kinds of complaints he had been filing on behalf of his employee clients for more than a decade. His methods included talking with executives and managers in seminars and workshops, as well as developing policies, contracts and other tools to help them achieve compliance with the law.

While writing his first book, LAWSUIT FREE! HOW TO PREVENT EMPLOYEE LAWSUITS, Don saw that the standard lawyerly advice ("Cover your behind — -and get it in writing") wasn't all that helpful. Compliance with the law, by itself, is no guarantee against litigation. A great number of sexual harassment, discrimination and wrongful termination claims are filed out of ignorance, because even when the employer is well informed on the law, employees may not be. Even though many of employee lawsuits are ultimately determined to be groundless, that doesn't prevent them from being filed, nor does it offer much solace through many expensive months of depositions, motions to produce documents and other discovery procedures and the mounting legal fees that come with them.

The real trick, Don discovered, lay in cultivating enthusiastic employees instead of disgruntled ones. His philosophy evolved and grew more positive as he put more distance between himself and courts of law. In his second book, BUILDING POWERFUL EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIPS!, he wrote, "The most critical component for today's business success is personnel management. It is the one constant in a sea of change. The failure of this relationship results in turnover, disloyalty, unproductivity and lawsuits. The mastery of it results in profitability and joy."

Easy to say, but what does mastery of personnel management really mean? As Don said in a recent symposium for employers, "Many workplace policies and procedures were designed MORE THAN 50 years ago, when management's goal was to control employees. Do what we tell you to do and we'll punish you when you don't. Please don't think for yourself because that's more dangerous than it could ever be helpful. Managers didn't care whether or not the employee felt good. They only cared whether they could get workers to work hard from 9:00 'til whenever."

"But guess what. Now it's a new century and the whole notion of Control is Dead. Gone. Poof. Forget-about-it! What has taken its place? Management by Agreement . That's right, the New Age is here. And it's creeping into the workplace. To be successful today, we have to create management systems that allow business owners and managers to empower the workplace and become more inclusive in the process. We can't simply tell somebody what his or her performance should be and then attempt to control that performance. We have to enlighten them to the needs of the organization and help them to 'own' their performance. Only by creating strong bonds between the business and its employees can an employer steer clear of the kinds of workplace conflicts that are likely to escalate into full-blown court proceedings."

Strange words from a man who spent much of his adult life suing companies for a living. Yet times change, and Don is changing with them. Besides spreading his ideas through the Employer Advisors Network, he has tackled issues of workplace dramas in his latest book, VICTIMS, VILLAINS AND HEROES: MANAGING EMOTIONS IN THE WORKPLACE, co-authored with Loy Young.

Do business clients and prospective clients want to hear this kind of message from their advisors? In a world where employment disputes are commonly settled in winner-take-all adversary proceedings, do managers respect advice that guides them toward win-win situations?

You bet they do! (Just take a look at Don's Speaking Schedule.)

3. The HR That Works Program

With virtually every business hooked up to the Internet, Don discovered that the World Wide Web provides a new tool for disseminating employment practices and HR information that has a much wider reach than personal speaking appearances or even books. When a business person is faced with the challenge of personnel management, he or she no longer reaches for a book first. Instead, the fastest, easiest and most informative place to look for help is the Internet. This fact has led to the creation of the Employer Advisors Network, Inc.

Available through Employer Advisors Network members, the HR That Works program is designed to meet the needs of companies who do not have full-time employment law and HR experts on staff. It helps cut through the overwhelming sea of information so that employees can master the nuts and bolts of employment compliance obligations while growing a more productive workforce.

The HR That Works program includes the books LAWSUIT FREE! and BUILDING POWERFUL EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIPS!, the Self-Conducted Legal Compliance Audit, access to more than 190 downloadable personnel forms, a model Employee Handbook, a model Contract Builder, an Employee Knowledge Survey, numerous Webinars and other resources, and unrestricted access to the customer area of the HR That Works web site. It is the most practical program available for legal protection of Employers.

Individual training modules offer more in-depth analyses of the most common problem areas in employment practices: (1) Recruitment and Selection; (2) Keeping Great Employees; (3) Diversity and Discrimination; (4) Sexual Harassment; (5) Investigating, Managing and Preventing Wrongful Employee Conduct; (6) Discipline and Termination; (7) Managing Employees who Can't or Won't Come to Work; (8) Wage and Hour; (9) Performance Management and more. 

Agencies will find the HR That Works program the most effective way to provide the information their clients need to know. Yet the World Wide Web is interactive by its nature, and knowledge flows in both directions. For individual situations that go beyond the scope of EAN's other materials, the program includes perhaps the most valuable online resource of all--the ability to put employers in touch with attorney and consultant members around the country.

4. How to Build Your Professional Practice

Don Phin, veteran employment law practitioner and HR consultant, offers this advice for any HR professional seeking to build his or her career:

To view a step by step process to HR excellence, click here.
 
If you are interested in a Special Report Don wrote on Presentation Techniques, please
click here .



Don Phin
Specialist in pro-active and preventive measures to eliminate costly employment-related litigation

References

Don Phin is the visionary behind HR That Works. To learn more about him go to DonPhin.com.

"Our clients and prospects that attended are extremely enthusiastic regarding dealing with their employees on a whole new level and have new hope to affect positive change in their organizations on many fronts, from lowering their workers comp experience mods to enhancing productivity in general."

Erik Van Beurden,
Executive Vice President,
Van Beurden Insurance Services, Inc.

"This is great program that is right in the mark for today."

Carol Bates,
Pro-Line

"Excellent"

Artie McFerrin,
President,
KMCO, Inc.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Is a program like Employer Advisors Network's available anywhere else?

A: Not as far as we know, and we've researched the question thoroughly. The Employer Advisors Network program is designed to let independant professionals compete successfully with large firms and, at the same time, completely dominate the small firm market in their local area.


2. What limitations do you have on the use of your products?

A: Members cannot sub-license HR That Works materials or give them away for use by other companies, attorneys, consultants, insurance companies or others without written permission from EAN. However, members are welcome to work with EAN to provide HR That Works materials to others on a joint venture basis and earn passive overrides in the process.

3. What about technical support issues?

A: It's in all of our best interest to make sure that EAN's products, services and marketing materials are easy to use and that there are no bugs in the system. In most cases, you can rely on technical support from the essential software--Microsoft 2000 Suite (including PowerPoint, Word and Outlook) and Adobe PageMaker and Acrobat. You should already have your own computer techie and graphics guru as part of your business team. If a technical issue arises that they can't answer, e-mail us and we'll get it answered ASAP.


4. Why shouldn't I just develop all these materials myself?

A: If that's where you want to spend hundreds of hours of time and hundreds of thousands of dollars to get there, be our guest. If you'd rather devote your valuable time to building a lucrative career instead of reinventing the wheel, just follow our program guidelines.


5. How do I know the materials are legally accurate?

A: EAN president, Don Phin, has been practicing employment law since 1983. He is the editor of a prestigious employment practices journal. All training modules, special reports and other documents have been thoroughly researched and analyzed, reviewed by attorneys and other professionals across the country and professionally edited. The materials are of the highest possible quality right now, and we expect them to get even better over time with input from you and our partners. All materials are not intended as a substitute for legal advice in specific cases.


6. What do I do next?

A:
Contact Employer Advisors Network at: E-mail: don@hrthatworks.com or
Phone: (800) 234-3304
We will correspond with you immediately to answer any questions and take you through an extended tour of the program.




Don Phin,
specialist in pro-active and preventive measures to eliminate costly employment-related litigation

About Don Phin

Don Phin graduated from McGeorge School of Law at the University of the Pacific in Sacramento, California, and was admitted to the California State Bar in 1983. For the next 14 years he practiced as a litigation attorney, specializing in employees' job discrimination, wrongful termination and sexual harassment claims against Employers. He helped write the California Whistle Blower Protection Act of 1986 and amendments to California Code of Civil Procedure sec. 128.5, providing sanctions for bad faith and frivolous litigation tactics.

In 1995, Phin earned his certification as a professional consultant to management (CPMC) and began a consulting practice dedicated to helping small and mid-sized companies comply with employment laws, using tools that included audits, surveys, model personnel policies and procedures and employee handbook preparation.

In 1998, Phin expanded his practice further and founded
donphin.com , a nationwide Employers' information and consulting practice based on Internet and print media, public speaking and individual coaching.

Phin has presented his seminars and workshops to such organizations as the International Risk Management Institute
www.irmi.com, Insurance Marketing and Management Services www.imms.com, The CEO Club www.ceoclubs.org The Institute of WorkComp Advisors www.workcompadvisors.com, the Society for Human Resource Management www.shrm.org, the National Human Resources Association www.humanresources.org , Financial Executives Institute, www.fei.org , The Executive Committee www.teconline.com , and the Foundation of Enterprise Development www.fed.org , and more

Phin is the editor of Employment Practices Liability Consultant (EPLIC), a publication of the International Risk Management Institute, and author of the monthly online e-zine Compliance and Culture
LFNewsltr.aspx . He is the author of the books Lawsuit Free!, How to Prevent Employee Lawsuits and Building Powerful Employment Relationships! and co-author with Loy Young of Victims, Villains and Heroes: Managing Emotions in the Workplace.