BLOG

Filter By:

Sneaky HR Tasks Eating Your Time (and How to Fix Them)

It’s time to tackle those sneaky HR time thieves and take back your calendar. Here’s how.

IT’S HERE!

Your FREE HR Checklist

Here’s your checklist of important tasks related to payroll, benefits, compliance, and general HR. 

These tasks shouldn’t take up your workweek. But when systems fall short, they do. If you’re a small or mid-size business owner or HR leader, you probably didn’t get into this role because you love tracking down time-off requests, chasing signatures, or answering the same benefits question 14 times.


And yet… here we are.

Studies show that small business owners spend about 16 hours (or two full days) per week on HR-related administrative work.

Most businesses lose valuable time to the slow drip of small, repetitive “this will only take a minute,” tasks that quietly eat up the workweek. Add them up, and suddenly your strategic HR goals, like recruitment, retention, and leadership development, get pushed aside.

Here are some of the most common areas that may be draining your time.

Time-Consuming HR-Related Tasks

They seem small. But over time, these tasks drain your attention, your energy, and your progress.

1. Repetitive Tasks and Rework

Every time you hunt down a missing signature or resend login details, you lose time you could be using elsewhere. The common offenders? Answering the same employee questions over and over:

“How do I add my baby to insurance?”
“When do benefits start?”
“How many PTO days do I have left?”

Sound familiar?


Individually, these are quick answers. Collectively? They’re a constant interruption machine. When you stop to respond, you lose focus, break momentum, and push higher-value work further down your list.

🛠️ How To Fix It:  Uncover the pain points. Which areas are bogging down the process due to repetition? Where can you create a self-service culture? This can mean establishing a simple internal HR hub (in your intranet, shared drive, or HR platform), short FAQs on benefits, PTO, payroll timing, and onboarding, or short videos that walk through routine processes.

Then, train employees to go there first. When someone asks a repeated question, send the link along with your answer. Over time, behavior shifts. HR becomes a source, not a help desk.

2. Correcting Payroll Errors

The latest software makes running payroll seem easy, but if something goes wrong, the liability is still yours. Miscalculating pay, outdated tax information, and manually tracking time off are time-consuming to fix, hard to catch, and expensive if you don’t, not just in terms of costs but also in lost time and eroded trust among your workers.

 



🛠️ How To Fix It
:  Automate what you can. Look for tools that let employees request time off directly, route approvals to managers, automatically update balances, and sync with payroll.

When automation handles the basics, HR shifts away from data entry to policy guidance. You’ll still handle exceptions, but you won’t be stuck crunching numbers late at night.

➡️➡️READ MORE: DIY Payroll: Just Because You Can, Doesn’t Mean You Should 

Or leave it to the experts by outsourcing payroll to an IRS-certified PEO. A PEO can simplify the payroll process with a cloud-based payroll portal for employers, online employee access to pay stubs, W-2s, benefits info, employee handbooks, and secure, paperless direct deposits. They can also take care of onboarding, payroll taxes, IRS deposits, benefits administration, compliance guidance, and provide HR support.

3. DIY Compliance Monitoring

Labor laws change constantly. Posting requirements update. Salary thresholds shift. Leave laws multiply. Keeping up with shifting deadlines, state-level compliance requirements, and studying the IRS’s recently updated guidance under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Trying to monitor all of this yourself is not only time-consuming – it’s also stressful.


One misstep can be costly. In 2025, the Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division recovered more than $259 million in back wages for nearly 177,000 employees. That’s an average of $1,465 per worker (the most since 2019).

🛠️ How To Fix It:  Don’t carry compliance alone. Get expert help by partnering with a professional. Whether it’s through a PEO, outside counsel, or a compliance partner, get support that keeps you updated on requirements that apply to your business.

➡️➡️READ MORE: Navigating Compliance Minefields

You’ll need advice on tricky employee situations, alerts on multi-state regulatory changes, new pay transparency rules, evolving paid leave requirements, changing wage-and-hour laws, new employment-related laws on AI, and much more. 

🚀 Pro Tip: Stay compliant with our HR Checklist covering the latest updates and deadlines related to compliance, benefits, payroll, and general HR that you need to take care of each quarter. Download your free HR Checklist ➡️ HERE

4. Updating Employee Data in Multiple Places

Name changes. Address changes. Promotions. New pay rates. If you’re entering the same update into payroll, benefits, retirement platforms, and internal trackers, you’re doing triple-plus work and increasing the chance of errors. 


🛠️ How To Fix It
: Integrate your systems, invest in HR technology, or work with a PEO. A unified HR platform can help connect payroll, benefits, time tracking, and employee records, among other things.

With better integration, changes flow through automatically. That means fewer entries, fewer errors, and more free time.

5. Handling Every Employee Issue Personally

When you’re the only go-to for every conflict, complaint, or issue, your day gets hijacked fast. Some things absolutely belong with HR. But many could be resolved earlier and better by trained managers.

🛠️ How To Fix It: Upskill your managers by teaching them to give feedback, handle minor conflicts, and document specific issues.  This doesn’t remove HR from the process; rather, it elevates the role, moving them from firefighter to advisor.

Stop the HR Busy Work, Amplify Your Impact

Normalizing HR busy work has real consequences, including burnout. Your top performers may feel overwhelmed by constant overtime or pressure to meet demands. It also creates dependence on key team members, making it difficult to delegate when only a few people hold essential knowledge or responsibilities.

Maintaining inefficient processes limits growth, slows project delivery, and prevents your team from focusing on strategic initiatives. 🛠️ How To Fix It:  Partnering with an IRS-certified PEO can help. By taking on time-consuming tasks, PEOs help small businesses get back more time to focus on productivity and growth. In addition to saving time, a PEO can also save your business money by identifying inefficiencies, streamlining HR processes, and helping you make critical cost-cutting decisions.

Studies show that businesses working with a PEO:

☑️Grow twice as fast and are 50% less likely to go out of business

☑️Have a 12% lower employee turnover rate

☑️Have an ROI of 27.2 % per year, based on cost savings alone

☑️Experience double the annual median revenue growth, with an added 16% increase in profitability

If you constantly feel behind, the fix isn’t more hustle. It’s better tools, clearer processes, and the right support. A PEO can help you stop the small stuff from piling up, so you can invest your time where it matters most. And if you need help, just give us a call at📱 800-446-6567

Find Out What a PEO Can Do for You

If you’re a small to mid-sized business, a PEO can lighten your workload and strengthen your operations. Imagine focusing on growth while experts handle your payroll, taxes, benefits, HR, and compliance.

⬇️Read more about the advantages of working with a PEO in our series:

🔷 HELP WANTED: HR Team or PEO Partner


Investing in an HR team versus partnering with a PEO, which path is best for your small business? As your business grows, managing HR gets complicated – fast.

Should you build your own HR team or explore the benefits of partnering with a PEO? Here’s how to decide which choice best fits your business. ➡️Link #1Link #1Read More

🔷 NEW RESEARCH: More Small Businesses Are Turning to PEOs


Compelling research from the National Association of Professional Employer Organizations (NAPEO) shows that PEOs are helping small businesses scale – a game-changer in 2026.

Working with a PEO isn’t about outsourcing; it’s about upgrading how you manage HR.  It’s about investing in smarter growth, happier employees, and peace of mind. In a business world that’s only getting more complex, that’s a benefit worth having on your side. Thousands of successful businesses are already doing it – and the data proves it works. ➡️Link #2Link #2Read More

IT’S HERE!

Your FREE HR Checklist

Here’s your checklist of important tasks related to payroll, benefits, compliance, and general HR. 

AdobeStock_277387980_01
About Propel HR. Propel HR is an IRS-certified PEO and a leading provider of human resources and payroll solutions for 30 years. Propel partners with small to mid-sized businesses to manage payroll, employee benefits, compliance and risks, and other HR functions in a way that maximizes efficiency and reduces costs. For more information, visit propelhr.com

The Productivity Playbook: How to Turn Outsourcing into a Strategic Win

Here’s your game plan for turning outsourcing into a winning streak.

IT’S HERE!

Your FREE HR Checklist

Here’s your checklist of important tasks related to payroll, benefits, compliance, and general HR. 

Productivity is the secret sauce that separates teams stuck on the sidelines from those with winning streaks. Chances are you’re juggling hiring, compliance, benefits, culture, and about a dozen other priorities . . . all while the clock keeps ticking.

Your power play? Outsourcing. When used strategically, it boosts productivity, streamlines operations, and frees you up to focus on what actually moves the scoreboard – your bottom line.

First Quarter: What Productivity Really Means

In HR, productivity isn’t about sprinting faster – it’s about running the right plays at the right time.


True HR productivity means delivering meaningful outcomes with minimal wasted effort. Speed matters, sure, but impact matters more.

Fast hiring doesn’t matter if turnover remains high. Smooth payroll is great . . .  unless errors keep forcing replays.

At its core, productivity is about consistent, high-quality execution that supports your business year-round.

Here’s the basic stat line. The fundamental formula HR teams use looks like this: Productivity = Total Output / Total Input.

📤Output: Projects completed, revenue generated, goals achieved

📥Input: Labor hours, number of employees, or financial costs

It’s simple math but powerful when you track the right metrics.

Why HR Productivity Is For Champions

When HR productivity is dialed in, your entire team plays better.

Here’s what that looks like on the field:

🎯Better Employee Experience. Faster responses, smoother onboarding, clearer policies – all retention fuel.

🎯Stronger Compliance Defense. Mistakes lead to fines, audits, and penalties – that’s expensive. Productive HR keeps risk off the scoreboard.

🎯Scoring Efficiency. In the Red Zone, the stakes are high, and scoring opportunities significantly increase. When your HR team isn’t buried in paperwork, they can make a more strategic impact by focusing on culture, performance, and growth.

🎯Leadership Trust. HR shifts from order-taker to trusted partner.

The results? A productive HR function is the engine that keeps your people – and your business – moving forward.

The Stats Don’t Lie: Proof from the League

The data backs it up:

➡️Flexibility & Remote Work. A Gartner report finds that 43% of employees working flexible hours say they are more productive. Gallup found that fully remote workers report the highest engagement levels.

➡️Engagement Matters. Highly engaged teams are 17% – 21% more productive than disengaged ones.

➡️The Productivity Gap. Top-tier companies grew more productive, while others saw declines due to inefficient collaboration and low engagement.

🎯Winning teams don’t guess; they measure, adjust, optimize, and power up.

The Box Score: Common HR Productivity Metrics


To know how your team is performing, you need the right stats:

📊 Output Metrics. Revenue per employee, output per hour, goals completed vs. assigned

📊 Efficiency Metrics. Time spent per task, employee utilization

📊 Quality Metrics. Accuracy and impact, not just speed

📊 Engagement Indicators. Engagement scores and absenteeism.

📊 Financial Metrics. Total Cost of Workforce (TCOW)

These numbers tell you whether your plays are working and what needs to be redesigned.

Second Half Adjustments

This is where smart teams pull ahead. One of the most effective strategies? Outsourcing to a Professional Employer Organization (PEO).

A PEO helps improve productivity by offloading time-consuming tasks while strengthening the entire employee lifecycle through MVP expertise and next-level HR tech.

🔥Think of it as adding multiple Tom Bradys to your roster.

THE GAME PLAN

Play #1: Reallocate Resources to Core Strengths


The fastest productivity gain comes from freeing your teams from admin overload. By outsourcing, you get:

Time Savings. Business owners can spend 20+ hours per month on HR admin-related tasks. Outsourcing frees up time for growth, sales, and strategy.

Administrative Relief. Payroll, benefits enrollment, and multi-state compliance tasks move off your plate and into expert hands.

A Team of MVPs. Outsourcing gives you access to a team of pros, ready to help when you need it.

Play #2: Build a Deeper Talent Bench that Flexes

An engaged workforce is naturally more productive.

💼 Lower Turnover. Companies using PEOs see 10%–14% lower turnover, reducing disruptions and retraining time.

💼 Big-league Benefits. PEOs provide access to Fortune 500-level benefits, boosting satisfaction and engagement.

💼 Faster Onboarding. Streamlined onboarding helps new hires get in the game.

Play #3: Upgrade Your Tech Stack

PEOs give small and mid-sized businesses access to advanced HR technology without the big-ticket price tag.

📊 Automation. Payroll and tax automation reduce errors and time-consuming fixes.

📊 Employee Self-service. Employees handle PTO, pay stubs, and benefits updates themselves with fewer interruptions for HR.

Play #4: Strengthen Your Compliance Defense


Compliance isn’t optional and managing it internally can drain focus fast. With a PEO on your team, you get:

🛡️Expert Guidance. A team of HR pros helps prevent fumbles and penalties. PEOs stay on top of federal, state, and local regulations, including ACA and FMLA.

🛡️Safety Programs. Proactive safety audits reduce workplace incidents and business disruption.

Play #5: Win on the Scoreboard

All these efficiencies lead to real, measurable stats:

🏆Faster Growth. Businesses using a PEO grow 7% – 9% faster than those that don’t. And are 50% Less Likely to Go Out of Business

🏆High ROI. The average annual return on investment is 27.2% based solely on cost savings.

💥That’s not just a win – it’s a blowout. It’s the stuff championships are made of.

FINAL CALL: Make Productivity Your Winning Play!


How far can you go? Productivity isn’t a one-time drill – it’s a GOAT mindset.

When you measure what matters, optimize repetitive work, and outsource strategically, you’re not just working faster . . . You’re working smarter. That’s for legends.

🔥Outsourcing is no rookie move. It’s a strategic productivity partner that helps HR shift from scrambling to scoring. And keeping that winning streak hot.

Ready to Turn HR into a Powerhouse?

Ready to hear your crowd ROOOAAARRR? 🎉 This power playbook is your first step.

➡️If you need some coaching or a huddle about your productivity game plan, we’ve got you all the way to the Super Bowl winning streak and beyond – just give us a call.

IT’S HERE!

Your FREE HR Checklist

Here’s your checklist of important tasks related to payroll, benefits, compliance, and general HR. 

AdobeStock_277387980_01
About Propel HR. Propel HR is an IRS-certified PEO and a leading provider of human resources and payroll solutions for 30 years. Propel partners with small to mid-sized businesses to manage payroll, employee benefits, compliance, risk, and other HR functions in ways that maximize efficiency and reduce costs. To learn more, visit propelhr.com

Scaling Smart: How a PEO Prepares Your Business for Growth

Is your business growing? Here’s how a PEO becomes a powerful advantage as you gear up for bigger things.

IT’S HERE!

Your FREE HR Checklist

Here’s your checklist of important tasks related to payroll, benefits, compliance, and general HR. 

If you run a small or midsize business, you already know growth is exciting, yes — but also unpredictable, and sometimes overwhelming. That’s exactly why more business owners and HR leaders are choosing Professional Employer Organizations, or PEOs, not just to outsource HR tasks, but to grow smarter, faster, and more sustainably.

The Top 10

A PEO helps you scale without letting the behind-the-scenes stuff collapse under the weight of bigger payrolls, more onboarding, greater compliance risk, and higher employee expectations. It’s like adding an entire HR department overnight, minus the overhead and recruitment scramble. A few advantages include:

1. You Get HR Infrastructure Before You Actually Need It (Which Is Exactly When You Need It)

Most small businesses don’t feel the pain of HR complexity until it’s too late. Payroll errors start multiplying, employees want benefits you’re not equipped to provide, and suddenly you’re Googling state labor laws at 11:30 p.m.

A PEO lays the foundation before those cracks show. Payroll scales without drama. Whether you have 10 people or 110, payroll stays smooth, compliant, and on time. Onboarding becomes a real process and not a scramble. Templates, checklists, digital forms, background screening, and automated workflows ensure consistency as you grow. Policies adjust proactively. A PEO helps you build employee handbooks, update them with new laws, and create clear rules that reduce risk as your headcount increases.

2. A PEO Delivers the Big-Company Benefits Employees Want

Here’s the part that often surprises business owners: a PEO can give you access to benefits packages typically reserved for much larger companies.

Because a PEO pools together employees across its client base, you essentially get to “buy in bulk,” accessing high-quality benefits at lower rates. That means you can offer your team robust health plans, retirement savings options, and other top-tier benefits typically reserved for larger companies (and top talent expects).

🎯When employees enjoy comprehensive benefits without compromise, your company is seen as a long-term career option. Retention rises, and as every HR pro knows, that’s a growth strategy.

3. Compliance Stops Being a Guessing Game

Growth = risk.  New states. New regulations. New employment laws. New reporting requirements.

This is where many small businesses unintentionally step into danger territory. The rules change constantly and the stakes are high.

A PEO becomes your compliance command center:

✅They track federal, state, and local employment laws.

✅They help maintain the required documentation.

✅They ensure new hires are classified correctly.

✅They reduce risk with structured workplace policies.

✅And because of the co-employment relationship, many PEOs also share certain administrative responsibilities – meaning you’re not alone if something goes sideways.

🎯Growing is risky. Growing without compliance support? That’s gambling.

4. HR Technology You Don’t Have to Build Yourself

Scaling is smoother when everything is connected, such as payroll, onboarding, PTO tracking, benefits enrollment, performance management, and reporting. But building your own HR tech stack or licensing multiple vendors gets expensive fast.

🎯A PEO delivers the all-in-one HR command center designed for your business. Better data, better workflows, better decision-making.

5. A PEO Frees Up Time (A Lot of It)

If you’re a business owner, your job is to grow the business, not troubleshoot payroll deductions. If you’re an HR manager, your job is to support the people strategy, not drown in admin work.

A PEO takes on repetitive, time-consuming tasks, such as processing payroll, managing benefits, handling tax filings, and preparing compliance documentation. The more you grow, the more time you reclaim, instead of watching your workload escalate with each hire.

6. You Gain a Team of HR Experts Without Expanding Your Staff

Growing companies don’t always have the luxury of immediately hiring a full HR team — HR generalists, benefits specialists, payroll administrators, compliance officers, recruiters, risk managers, the whole lineup.

A PEO gives you access to exactly those roles, on-demand expertise, without the full-time salary load.

➡️➡️READ MORE: HR Help Wanted: In-house Team or PEO Partner

Need help rolling out a new PTO policy? Preparing for benefits renewal? Handling a sensitive employee relations issue? There’s an expert for that. It’s like having a seasoned HR department already onboard, ready to advise you every step of the way.

7. You Become More Attractive to Investors and Partners

Here’s something entrepreneurs don’t always think about: investors love operational maturity. When a PEO is part of your infrastructure, it signals you’re compliant, manage risks well, your HR processes are stable and that you can scale responsibly.

🎯For investors, lenders, and potential partners, a strong HR foundation = reduced risk. And reduced risk makes you a better bet. For acquisitions and rapid growth phases, a PEO can also make integration smoother.

8. A PEO Helps You Build a Better Employee Experience

Growth doesn’t just require more people; it requires keeping the good people you already have on board.

A PEO helps you:

✅Improve communication and access to information.

✅Build modern HR processes that employees trust.

✅Provide competitive benefits

✅Create fair, consistent workplace policies.

🎯A better employee experience leads to lower turnover and higher morale. And in high-growth companies, stability is gold.

9. You Can Expand Into New States With Confidence

Need to hire employees in another state? That’s great for growth, but it creates compliance challenges due to different tax rules and labor law requirements. 

🎯A PEO handles all of it, letting you recruit the best talent in any location without losing sleep or risking penalties.

10. You Scale Strategically

Growth can stress your business when operations lag behind headcount. A PEO aligns both, so you’re expanding strategically.

🎯The result? Smooth transitions. Predictable costs. Cleaner processes. Less risk. Happier employees. And more time to focus on what actually grows the business — not on what slows it down.

Growth Is Easier ➡️When You’re Not Doing Everything Yourself

If you’re preparing to scale — or even thinking about it — the question isn’t whether you can handle growth alone. It’s whether you should.

With a PEO, growth is a plan.

A PEO delivers the infrastructure, expertise, and stability that power growing companies, without requiring a major investment or a staff increase.

Ready to see what a PEO can do? We can lighten your workload and help you drive growth, just give us a call at (800) 446-6567 or visit propelhr.com

🎯PEO Series: The PEO Difference🎯

Learn more about how a PEO can help your business in our series:

🔶HR Help Wanted: In-house Team or PEO Partner. Investing in an HR team versus partnering with a PEO, which path is best for your small business? As your business grows, managing HR gets complicated –  fast. Should you build your own HR team or explore the benefits of partnering with a PEO? Here’s how to decide which choice best fits your business. Read More

🔶Navigating Compliance Minefields. Navigating HR compliance can feel like tiptoeing through a minefield — one wrong move can trigger costly consequences. From pay transparency laws to overtime thresholds, new regulations evolve faster than most small HR teams can keep up with. Here’s a look at the top HR compliance challenges and how to avoid turning small missteps into expensive lessons. Read More

🔶New Research Shows Why More Small Businesses Are Turning to PEOs. The data is in! And it shows how partnering with a PEO will be the smartest move for small businesses in 2026. Recently released research from the National Association of Professional Employer Organizations (NAPEO) shows that PEO partnerships are helping small businesses scale. It’s smarter, more efficient, and a game-changer. Here’s what the latest data shows. Read More

IT’S HERE!

Your FREE HR Checklist

Here’s your checklist of important tasks related to payroll, benefits, compliance, and general HR. 

AdobeStock_277387980_01

About Propel HR. Propel HR is an IRS-certified PEO that has been a leading provider of human resources and payroll solutions for more than 25 years. Propel partners with small to mid-sized businesses to manage payroll, employee benefits, compliance and risks, and other HR functions in a way that maximizes efficiency and reduces costs. For more information, visit www.propelhr.com

Hate Group Activity: An HR Perspective

The white supremacist rally that recently occurred in Charlottesville, VA has raised a multitude of questions within the realm of politics, law enforcement and the public forum at large. But what if the issues seep into the workplace?

Can an employer fire someone for participating in a hate group activity on their own time?

This is a complex question with no clear answer, however some general guidance is available to assist with such a challenging topic and potential business decision that must be made.

Three key areas to consider when faced with most controversial employment matters include:

  1. Employment Law
  2. Employer Policy
  3. Company Risk

 

EMPLOYMENT LAW

At this time, there are no known federal laws that would be applicable against a private employer in this situation. Freedom of speech may be applicable with government workers, but not in the private sector. Claims of protected religious activity have been made in the past, but to date, have failed when made by hate groups such as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK).

State law may require a closer look. Some states have statutes designed to protect employees from employment action against them based on their lawful conduct when off duty (such as right to lawfully protest something on their own time). Seek legal counsel regarding state laws before taking action.

Related Video: WYFF News featuring Propel HR president Lee Yarborough – Tech experts, Human Resource specialists warn about “public shaming” of Charlottesville protestors

 

EMPLOYER POLICY

An employer’s current policies should be reviewed when considering employment action:

  • Have other employees submitted complaints claiming they felt harassed or intimidated by the employee in question? What does your anti-harassment policy say?
  • Has the activity become a hot topic on social media with certain employees’ pages referencing work and/or co-workers and the hate group activity? What is your social media policy?
  • Are there company emails circulating about the matter?
  • Are employees using personal devices to show coverage, photos of the hate group activity and participating employee to peers during working hours?
  • Has an argument about the hate group activity occurred on company time?

Corrective action regarding general conduct that impacts those participating in a hate group activity, as well as other employees, need to be considered to ensure a fair and impartial approach to the situation. If you don’t have anti-harassment and social media policies in place, now is the time to do so, before there is a problem.

Further reading: Politics at Work

 

COMPANY RISK

Risk analysis regarding hate group activity is imperative. Employers need to consider potential outcomes in advance of making a decision:

  • How impactful is the situation to your business? Will it blow over? Is the situation directly affecting employees and their ability to work? Will it interrupt or slow down operations? Will it escalate if the employee is not terminated? How might customers be impacted?
  • What happens if you terminate the employee for participating in a hate group activity on his or her own time and they decide to sue your company?
  • Is there a concern for violence erupting in the workplace based on the decision we make and are we prepared to avert that?
  • Is there an impact to the company’s brand?

Before you make any decisions about such an emotionally charged employment matter, make sure you answer these questions and complete fully thought-out analyses regarding employment law, employer policy and company risk. Failing to do so may result in significant expense to your company, loss of work time and even damage to your brand.

Further reading: My Employee Is Protesting Instead Of Working

Neither Propel PEO, Inc. nor Propel HR, Inc. is a law firm. This blog is intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and is not guaranteed to be correct, complete, or up‐to‐date.

Bring Summer to the Office

Ah, Summer! Remember running barefoot, eating popsicles, and playing kick the can until you were called home for dinner? Now, as an adult, summer has lost some of its allure. Days are spent inside looking at a computer screen instead of outside next to a pool. Recently, I took off early one day and took my daughter to get a snow cone. I felt like a kid again.

Summer is more than a season; it’s a feeling. Truthfully, we all need a little bit of “summer” each year to keep us sane and to keep our priorities in check.

How can you run a business and manage employees with a summer mentality, and yet stay professional? After enjoying that snow cone, I started trying to come up with ideas to help our whole staff feel like its summer at Propel HR:

  • Summer hours: Can your business meet demands and allow employees flexible summer hours? Many companies offer employees shorter work hours on Fridays, while keeping the office covered through a rotation system. A few extra hours a week to go to the pool or lake does wonders employee morale.
  • Sweet treats: Who says kids are the only ones who need an ice cream break? Make your own sundaes or call the ice cream truck to come to your office. It is always a huge hit that brings laughter to your staff.
  • Summer vacations: Many employees will be taking time off this summer, so make sure your shifts are filled and that your clients’ needs are being met. Prepare for this by cross training and communicating schedules to the staff.
  • Summer social: Whether you plan a cook-out or a potluck, celebrate the season with a social for your team. Get creative and have fun!

Unfortunately, as adults, work has taken the place of our summers off, but there is no reason you can’t still have a little summer fun at the office. It will make you feel like a kid again!

Further Reading: The Importance of Corporate Culture

The Importance of Corporate Culture

Recently, I spoke to a business owner who was concerned about his Corporate Culture. He is in a highly competitive creative field and he offers many perks such as flexible personal time, wellness outings, and even a ping pong table. Yet, recruitment is difficult and he feels that his current employees don’t fully value the culture he has tried to create. 

Corporate Culture is more than just a modern buzzword. It can be important to your bottom line by creating happier employees and a more efficient work environment. It can also help you attract talented employees that help your business grow. Culture transcends ping pong tables and open work-spaces, but these extras can play a part in how your employees relate to each other. Don’t mistake corporate culture for just a Millennial thing. Culture affects all age groups and can even help different generations relate to each other.

Define your Corporate Culture. 

There are four categories that you should review when evaluating the overall culture of your organization:

Beliefs and Values

These core components encompass the overarching vision of the company. Is there a clear sense of purpose? Are the executives, managers, and rank-and-file employees all on the same page when it comes to your basic corporate values? Are all team members striving towards the same unified goal? Are the company’s core values being considered in major decision-making? Write down your beliefs and values and make sure your employees are aware of them.

Norms, Processes, and Policies

These parts of the culture govern the operations of the business. They can be formal policies or informal standards of acceptable behavior. Do employees watch the clock and bolt at 5:00 or do they work until the job is complete? Are the processes between departments formalized with open communication channels? Is there an employee handbook and does it reflect the actual behavior of the company? If your processes and policies are not fully understood, clarify them and communicate them to your employees.

Rites, Rituals, and Shared Language

All cultures have their own set of rites, rituals, and shared language, and organizations are no exception. Examples are employee-of-the-month awards, birthday celebrations, office acronyms, and casual Fridays. By having shared experiences and routines, employees bond together. Do you have traditions at your workplace that are valued by employees? Are new experiences added and accepted among the group? Are there common stories involving work victories and defeats which are told time and again?

Habits and Expectations

These aspects of the culture inform the workforce how to behave and can influence many behaviors such as dress code, email etiquette, and work hours. What behaviors are rewarded? Are negative behaviors discouraged? Are team leaders behaving as positive role models?

Direct your Corporate Culture.

Corporate Culture is not concrete; it is fluid and ever-changing. There is always room to improve an organization’s culture and if a culture becomes toxic, it can take a while to turn around. Use surveys to ask for employee input and be willing to listen to feedback with an open mind. Encourage employees to be active contributors. Changing a culture takes time and requires conscious thought and effort.

Further reading:  Shift the Culture of Your Workplace

Culture is not just about ping pong tables and hip work spaces. It is so much more. A positive culture is one that fosters trust, respect, and dignity. It empowers employees to grow within the organization and take ownership of ideas and projects. It promotes learning and professional development, while discouraging toxic behaviors and poor work ethic. Culture can be the defining difference between you and your competitors. Focus on shaping your corporate culture and watch your employees and business thrive.

Propel HR Is One of the First CPEOs in the Country

Mind if we brag for a minute? We usually try to keep a low profile and let our service do the talking, but we’re really proud of this new award and excited about what it means for our clients.

Propel HR has been designated by the IRS as a Certified Professional Employer Organization (CPEO), which has been awarded to less than 10% of Professional Employer Organizations in the country. We’re the only CPEO headquartered in the Carolinas.

We’ve been a leading provider of human resource and payroll solutions throughout South Carolina, the Southeast and the rest of the US for more than 20 years, and now we’re among the very first PEOs that have been designated as a CPEO by the IRS. Out of nearly 1000 Professional Employer Organizations in the US, only 34* received the certification in the first round of designations.

“We are honored to be among the first CPEOs in the country,” said Propel President Lee Yarborough. “This is especially great news for our clients, who will now be further protected from employment tax liabilities.”

What exactly can this benefit your company?

  • Assurance. The professional employer organization has been thoroughly vetted by the IRS so the client company can be assured that the CPEO is a reputable, compliant, stable professional employer organization. 
  • Sole Payroll Tax Liability. The IRS will only hold the CPEO liable for federal payroll taxes and not the client. A certification designation means that the IRS cannot look to the client for federal payroll taxes, but only to the CPEO.
  • FICA and FUTA wage base restart. If a client begins a relationship with a CPEO in the middle of the year, it will not have a wage base restart. The CPEO is deemed a successor employer and therefore there is no wage base restart at the beginning of the relationship with the CPEO.
  • Federal Tax Credits. The client company, and not the CPEO, is entitled to the federal tax credits. The CPEO must give the client information necessary to claim any applicable credits.
  • Bonded. CPEOs are required to have a bond to cover federal taxes just in case something goes wrong. Propel HR has a $1 million bond, which is the highest amount required. Rest assured, we have you covered.

How did Propel HR become one of the first CPEOs?

The IRS established the voluntary certification program under the Small Business Efficiency Act (SBEA) of 2014, which passed through both houses of Congress with rare bipartisan support and was signed by President Obama.

The Small Business Efficiency Act gives CPEOs the authority to collect and remit federal employment taxes and saves the client money if they join or leave a PEO relationship. CPEO customers also qualify for specified federal tax credits.

PEOs that applied to become CPEOs went through a strict vetting process. The IRS’s certification process for CPEOs is involved, demanding and detailed. Both the initial application portion and the ongoing compliance portions require the submission of detailed financial information, background checks, questions about operations, historical information, experience, certifications and attestations from the CPA and executives of the CPEO. IRS agents spent hours with each application to thoroughly review and analyze the CPEO to determine if it was qualified to receive certification from the IRS. Link #1The IRS maintains a list of CPEOs on its website.

The newly Certified PEOs have proven to be industry leaders that have set a high standard of excellence and are now certified as trustworthy by the IRS. We’re proud to be a part of this distinguished group, and we’re excited to continue providing dependable HR and payroll solutions – now with the IRS’s stamp of approval. 

 

The Internal Revenue Service does not endorse any particular certified professional employer organization. For more information on certified professional employer organizations, go to www.IRS.gov.

*As of June 1, 2017, there are 87 CPEO licenses representing approximately 34 PEO companies.

How To Reduce Hiring Bias

I recently conducted an Interview Skills training for several clients. Though they were in very different businesses, they were all plagued with the same problem. They were having difficulty finding qualified and self-motivated employees. During the training, I heard several horror stories about applicant interviews and subsequent hirings gone wrong. People were hired based on their “fashion sense,” by matching keywords on a resume, and because the manager liked their Facebook profile. These tales pointed to a common organizational weakness: the managers lacked the understanding of the biases involved in hiring and the basic skills and techniques that can help to overcome them.

Let’s begin with a review of the typical tools used to screen applicants. Most of these tools are characteristically subjective.

Resume

A resume can be judged very differently depending on how the information is displayed, whether certain facts are left out, and the degree to which jargon and acronyms make the document understandable.

Solution:  Create a customized company application, which can be a better tool for collecting applicant information in a complete and systematic manner. The application should elicit the precise information you need for all applicants to evaluate their education, skills and experience.

Phone Screen and Face-to-Face Interview

A phone screen can also be a very subjective experience, depending on how the words and the tone of voice of the applicant are perceived by the interviewers. Most of us imagine how a person looks based only the telephone communication, and then, find we were quite wrong!

Research shows that the subjective judgements made by the interviewers within the first few minutes of the interview strongly influence the ultimate hiring decision! The answers to the subsequent questions help to confirm the interviewer’s subjective judgements that lead to the decision to hire or not. Therefore, the candidate’s appearance and communication manners have an unjustifiable weight in the hiring decision in the majority of cases.

Solution:  Prepare a standard list of questions based on the Bona Fide Occupational Qualifications (BFOQ). The phone screen and face-to-face interview (both are viewed as employment tests by law) will then be more reliable and valid. Begin by analyzing the competencies required for the employee to be successful in the job. then formulate a list of questions designed to find out if the applicant has ever demonstrated those competencies in past roles.

Using a list of questions designed to gather evidence of the necessary skills will be a better predictor of future success. This will also keep the questioning based on purely job-related skills and requirements.

Realize that no candidate is perfect. Use questions that require applicants to talk about negative past experiences that taught them improvement was needed. Finding employees who want to continue to learn and grow is a desired skill and a competitive advantage.

Further Reading: Mastering the Interview

Employers who use multiple interviewers in the selection process can benefit from using a standard Candidate Evaluation Form. This allows all interviewers record their personal ratings of the specific qualifications of the candidate. When the group meets to discuss the relative merits of several candidates, or even just one, they will know where they agree and disagree on their ratings.

Background Checks

Applicant background checks, drug screenings, credit checks and criminal history reviews also pose employment risks for employers. The authorization and disclosure requirements as well as privacy rights of applicants have made this complicated for employers depending on the state regulations.

Solution:  Provide a background check disclosure composed by or approved by an attorney in your state. A background check disclosure and authorization is now required to be separate from the application process, so this is normally separate step taken only on applicant finalists.

Also, when a decision is made not to hire is based on something found in the background check, adverse action correspondence is required. Provide the background report and the agency that reported it to the applicant. This allows the applicant to pursue corrections in the information gathered if the report is misleading.

Reference Checks

The risk of discrimination may be present in how reference checks are authorized and conducted.

Solution:  Ask the applicant to authorize reference checks as well as background checks. The information received in a reference check can be subjectively perceived, so again, a standard set of criteria should be used in gathering this information.

Job Description

Before starting the recruiting process, managers need to evaluate and update the job description used in recruiting for the position they are trying to fill.

Solution:  Make sure the job description contains the job’s qualifications, the essential duties and responsibilities required of the position. These qualifications and duties will help define the competencies and performance skill requirements that dictate the kinds of questions to include in the prepared list of interview questions.

In addition, include an “at will” statement, and a statement indicating that the company complies with legal requirements to accommodate individuals with disabilities. This job description can be used to help applicants understand the job during the selection process.

Organizational Culture

There is one place where subjectivity helps in the selection process. The organizational culture fit should also be a factor in the selection process. Managers who are working within the culture will have a better sense of candidates who are more likely to “fit in” with the people they will be working with.

It is critical to properly train all managers involved in the hiring process and to use appropriate and effective tools that reflect the specifics of the job and the organization. These investments can minimize the risks of discrimination claims, and reduce poor and costly hiring decisions.

The Wonder Women of Work

As a child of the 70s, Wonder Woman was a powerful influence in my life. I watched the TV show each week and I had a Wonder Woman lunchbox that I carried with pride. I pretended to be Lynda Carter and dreamed about having her gold cuff bracelets, cool boots, and Lasso of Truth. This weekend, Wonder Woman premiered in theatres with great success and a new generation of young girls will be emboldened by the strength of Wonder Woman.

As a young girl, my parents told me that I could be anything I wanted to be, and yet I was keenly aware that the women I knew were mostly teachers, nurses, or homemakers. I sang “I Am Woman, Hear Me Roar” but my teachers emphasized that boys were better than girls at math. I saw yachts at marinas and declared that one day I would own such luxuries, only to have someone ask if I planned to marry a rich man.

I needed Wonder Woman as a role model for me. She fought for justice using strength, morals, and the Lasso of Truth. She was a woman who made a difference in the world.

In my own career, I have seen some prejudices, and I still must call on my inner Wonder Woman occasionally to give me the strength to persevere. I am very aware of the many women who came before me and helped pave the path. Let’s celebrate the accomplishments and milestones of the Wonder Women of Work from 1975 to today.

  • In 1978, the Pregnancy Discrimination Act was passed as an amendment to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VII prohibits discrimination based on sex, race, color, national origin, and religion.
  • In 1993, the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) was passed entitling eligible employees to take unpaid, job-protected leave for specific family and medical reasons.
  • In 2009, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act was signed into law giving employees a fair opportunity to pursue a remedy for paycheck discrimination.
  • Women have increased their presence in the work force from 30.3 million in 1970 to 7 million during 2006-2010.
  • Approximately 60% of accountants in the U.S. are women per 2006-2010 census data while the 1970 census data shows very little participation of women as accountants. (See, girls are as good as boys at math!)
  • Females began outpacing males in higher education in the late 1970s and now make up more than 56% of college students.
  • The American Express study, The State of Women-Owned Businesses in 2016, there are 3 million women owned business in the U.S. employing nearly 9 million people and generating over $1.6 trillion in revenues.

Yet, there is still progress to be made. Women make up 57% of the labor force, yet still earn 20% less than men. Women own 38% of new businesses, yet only 2-6% receive any venture capital funding. Women account for just 7.5% of top earners and only 3.6% of CEOs in Fortune 500 companies.

Further Reading: Being Thankful For Diversity

As a female business leader and a mother of two bright daughters, I recognize the progress that has been made and that work still needs to be done. I encourage everyone to identify the Wonder Women of their workplaces, celebrate their accomplishments, and continue to push for greater equality overall.

Quality versus Quantity

In the daily struggle to produce and complete the myriad of tasks assigned, all can be guilty of ignoring Quality for the sake of Quantity. But at the end of each day, we need to ask ourselves, “What value did I bring to the organization today?” Work is not always about checking items off our list. Some days, we may not accomplish one thing on our to-do list, yet we provide tremendous value to the organization. Those are the days that we focus on Quality, not just Quantity.

As managers, this struggle affects not only us, but our employees as well. How do we lead by example and help our teams focus on quality service?

  • Don’t micromanage. Allow employees to control their own work flow but provide clear deadlines and expectations.
  • Consistently evaluate growth and forecast personnel needs. When stress is high and work is overloaded, it is easy to just fill a seat. However, take the time necessary to evaluate future needs. Does the company need another team member or would a team manager be the best approach for the future?
  • When a “star” employee comes around, managers are often guilty of piling on extra work. The employee is so competent and seems to be able to handle anything. However, everyone has a breaking point. As a manager, it is our job to set employees up for success, not failure.
  • Avoid the busywork trap. There is a feeling of accomplishment when we are able to complete a task, no matter how menial it may be. It is human nature to avoid the long, hard jobs and take care of the quick, easy ones. As managers, we must recognize this in ourselves and help our team as well. Work with employees to prioritize tasks based on value and maintain an open dialogue. Be prepared to switch responsibilities in order to provide the best Quality work for the company.

Further reading: 6 Ways To Increase Employee Engagement

All employees need to provide value to the organization every day. True value is measured by results not just busy work. Quality work is more valuable than Quantity work.  As leaders, we need to model this value-driven behavior to help our employees succeed.

How To Lose a Client The Right Way

In the business world, clients come and go. All businesses strive for perfect retention, but some things are beyond our control. Some clients go out of business, others change ownership and some just don’t see the value of your service or products.

When your company loses a profitable client, it is a blow to all employees and it can really shake morale. How you handle it as a leader determines how your employees will view this change. There are several things you can do to turn this into an opportunity instead a failure.

  1. Own up to your mistakes. If a client or situation was handled poorly, take ownership in the problem. Address it with the departing client and learn from it. Do not blame specific employees. Implement changes and processes to make sure that this does not happen again.
  1. End the client relationship with dignity and ethics. Apply the golden rule and treat the old client as you would want to be treated.
  1. Most employees don’t understand the financial impact of a lost client. Explain what it means to your bottom line. If employees understand the effect, they can help by reducing expenses and increasing sales. Every employee has a role in the profitability of your company.
  1. Be a strong and positive leader. Employees will look to you and feed off your reactions. If you are angry and nervous about the future, their attitudes will mimic yours. Instead, be honest but positive.
  1. Look on the bright side. We all have clients that are good financially but may not be good for the overall wellbeing of our businesses. Although the financial aspect is felt immediately, the time saved after the termination may allow your company to grow more profitably.

Related reading: Breaking Up Is Hard To Do

Pat Summit, who has won more college basketball games than any coach, has said, “To improve, you must make your weaknesses your strengths.” Apply this wisdom to client terminations and turn a negative situation into an opportunity to grow.

Shift the Culture of Your Workplace

I heard recently that a raise only makes a difference to an employee for the first 30 days. After that it just becomes his or her regular salary. It is no longer new and exciting.

So how do employers keep employees motivated and excited about growing in their job without tying progress solely to money?

A culture shift needs to take place. For a workplace to attract and retain good employees there must be a culture of trust. In study after study, employees prioritize the attributes of a good boss, and integrity and ethics are always at the top of the list. An ideal manager is fair and operates the business ethically. They are committed to doing the right thing even when it is difficult.

Further Reading: Take Time To Celebrate

Instead of calculating your staff hierarchy according to their return on investment, make an investment in your people instead:

  • Educate your employees
  • Offer them opportunities to grow professionally and personally
  • Allow them the chance to try something new

People want to be led and developed. Everybody will leave his job someday. Do not be fearful that personal growth will make people terminate sooner. Leadership and fear are bad partners.

From an HR perspective, this speaks directly to employee relations. If you are counseling or terminating an employee for poor performance or misconduct, be honest. Do not fire someone by saying you are eliminating the position when in actuality, the employee is just not good at the job. Truthfully and nicely, tell the employee why the decision was made. Believe me, this can be a life lesson for that individual, and the truth is always better even when it is difficult to say. As business owners and managers, we have an obligation to provide for our employees and nurture a culture of trust.

Take Time to Celebrate

I am writing this article after our annual State of the Company celebration. We just spent the past few hours reviewing our accomplishments of the past year, presenting our goals, and celebrating our team. Truthfully, this event is usually planned in early March after all year end numbers are confirmed and the previous year has been reduced to statics. When March passed by this year, I figured we were all so busy that no one would mind if we don’t make the annual production. But guilt set in and after I spoke to some key advisors, I was determined to take the time to make this festivity happen. 

Now, I sit in the afterglow of a successful event and realize this is one tradition that I will not let pass again. This morning in a beautiful offsite venue, the Propel HR team relaxed, laughed, ate, and celebrated our victories. Each department reported to the company and everyone gained more respect for their co-workers’ hard work. We recognized employees for their tenure as well as their commitment to our core values. Everyone left proud and in high spirits.

Further reading6 Ways To Increase Employee Engagement

The benefits of celebrations go far beyond the enjoyment of the party. Here are a few of the gains from well executed celebrations:

  • Team Building
  • Breaking Down Silos between Departments
  • Boosting Morale
  • Rewarding Top Performers
  • Integrating New and Out of Town Employees
  • Sparking Innovation
  • Motivating Performance
  • Fostering a Positive Culture

As an HR outsourcing company, we understand the value that special events, as well as small celebrations, have on a company’s culture. Our HR team plans monthly themed celebrations with games, contests, and good food. We host family picnics, cookouts, and holiday parties. We gather together to recognize employee milestones such as birthdays, weddings, and new babies.

Yet, today felt different. Today, we celebrated each other.

Most days, tasks get in the way and as a society, we don’t slow down enough to acknowledge our accomplishments. We are so focused on the next task that we often don’t reflect on past performance. Today was a good reminder to make sure that our company gathers regularly to celebrate the good work we do and to lift each other up. I am already planning for next year!

Mastering the Interview

Interviewing is difficult, but it is one of the most important jobs that a manager performs. Personally, I have made some wonderful hiring decisions, but I have also hired some employees that were not quite the right fit for our company. If I had been more thorough in the initial interview process, I could have avoided the pain of some of the bad hires.

Here are some tips to master the interview:

  • Know the position – Whether you have a formal job description or a rough draft, make sure you know the details of the job. Effectively communicate the position to the applicants.
  • Know the skill set required – What are the education requirements? What skills are necessary for consideration? Once the essential skills have been established, the field of applicants can be narrowed, allowing the most qualified candidates to stand out.
  • Create questions – Before the interview, take time to create questions that are appropriate to the job.
  • Be consistent – When interviewing multiple people for the same job, you must be consistent. Asking everyone the same questions helps you to be objective.
  • Avoid personal conversation – Sometimes you will establish a good rapport with the interviewee which leads to a more casual interview. However, remain professional and do not ask personal questions. There are specific questions you cannot ask during an interview. Make sure you are aware of what you can and cannot ask.
  • Involve HR – If you have an HR department or use ahuman resources outsourcing company, get them involved in the hiring process. They can guide you and keep you out of trouble.
  • Assessment tools – There are many assessment tools on the market which evaluate a candidate’s compatibility and judgment as well as their background. In my experience, these tools are well worth the cost.
 Further Reading: Hiring The Right Talent

And finally, follow your instincts. If your gut is telling you that something is not right with a candidate when all other signs say yes, you need to listen. Some people interview very well, but are not the right fit for the company’s culture.

Interviewing and hiring is both a science and an art. The right people are the key to your business’ success. It is time to master the interview!

When ICE Knocks on Your Door

Ever wonder what to do if government agents arrive at your business saying they are there to conduct an I-9 audit?

The Immigration Reform and Control Act (“IRCA”) of 1986 requires that all US employers verify that the individuals they hire are authorized to work in the US. As you know, the Form I-9 is used for verification of an individual’s authorization to work. It is critical that the Form I-9 is properly completed for each person hired.

Further Reading: New I-9 Form Effective 1/22/2017

The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) is the investigative division of the Department of Homeland Security, and in the first 100 days of the newadministration, ICE has increased its enforcement efforts and related arrests are reportedly up roughly 33% from last year. An ICE agent or auditor may legally arrive unannounced at your principal place of business or at a specific worksite to audit your Form I-9s.

What should you do to protect yourself if you find ICE officials at your business?
  1. Designate someone at your business to be the primary contact for governmental audits (for example: CEO, CFO, HR Manager, attorney). Make sure your front office personnel know to contact this person immediately if an agent from ICE (or any government agency) appears at the door.
  2. Ask to see the written Notice of Inspection if the ICE investigative agent or auditor does not present it to you upon their arrival. This notice lists specific information they will inspect.,.
  3. Employers are allowed 3 business days to produce the requested information so politely insist on your 3 days. Suggested language to use, “I’ll be happy to schedule the review of the requested information following the allowed three business days.”
  4. Request a copy of the Notice of Inspection.
  5. DO NOT consent to a search.
  6. DO NOT provide any information to the ICE investigator at this time.
  7. DO NOT answer any questions, no matter how simple they may seem.
  8. Immediately contact legal counsel. In addition, if Propel HR electronically stores your Form I-9s, you should also contact your Propel HR Representative.
  9. Determine one company representative, whether it be someone from human resources or legal counsel, to serve as the liaison with the auditor.
  10. Determine the exact information requested in the Notice of Inspection and pull the exact information together in an on-site meeting room or conference room for the auditor to conduct the review. The request will include production of Form I-9s but could also include supporting documents such as copies of payroll records and employee lists. DO NOT provide information that is outside the scope of the Notice of Inspection—only what is requested. If ICE will be taking the original records (not recommended), the company should make copies of all original records to remain on-site.
  11. DO NOT destroy any Form I-9s or related files following notice of a pending audit.
  12. Once the inspection is completed, ICE will notify the company of the results in writing. If there are violations cited, legal counsel should be brought in to review the results and assist with any negotiation, settlement or hearing that may result.
The best defense for an ICE inspection is a proactive offense:
  • Have a compliance plan for how your company handles its Form I-9 requirements to include conducting regular trainings for the individuals completing the Form I-9s.
  • Conduct regular but random, internal I-9 self-audits. Take care to not target a specific group. Consider seeking legal counsel to assist with this process.
  • Understand the record maintenance requirements for Form I-9s. Additional information about completion of Form I-9s is available online at http://www.uscis.gov/i-9 and employees responsible for completing the Form I-9 should regularly review and be familiar with the “Handbook for Employers, Guidance for Completing Form I-9“, which is available at http://www.uscis.gov/i-9.

An unannounced visit from ICE can be intimidating and unpleasant. Being prepared and having a plan will facilitate the process, saving your business time and money.

Neither Propel PEO, Inc. nor Propel HR, Inc. is a law firm. This blog is intended for informational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and is not guaranteed to be correct, complete, or uptodate.