Coronavirus is here to stay for longer than any of us would like. Many of the guidelines being shared are great for big business, but hard to implement for small businesses with limited resources. This guide outlines the basics around keeping your employees and your business healthy in a time of uncertainty. It’s being updated daily as new resources are being shared. For up-to-date recommendations for businesses and employers, you can also refer to the National Institute for Communicable Diseases (NICD) and Department of Health response guide (SA Coronavirus Portal) at www.sacoronavirus.co.za. The following steps will guide you and your team through the latest knowledge and resources available.
Educate Your Team
Promote Proper Hygiene and Respiratory Etiquette
Even if your team has already moved to a remove environment, which most have, help your employees stay healthy in whatever environment they choose. COVID-19 aside, this is always a good practice, worth spending some time on. Put some posters up on your walls, reminding passers-by to cough into their elbows, sneeze into a tissue and immediately dispose of it, and wash hands for at least 20 seconds with hot, soapy water, or use alcohol-based hand sanitizer. It's also worth reiterating before even small group gatherings, when people tend to be in closer contact with one another. For those in businesses still operating, where human-to-human contact might be necessary, provide gloves, masks, hand sanitizer, and other gear to slow the spread of germs.
Reassess Workplace Cleanliness
Sick or At-Risk Employees Must Stay Home
There are a lot of unknowns when it comes to Coronavirus, but with testing kits still not widely available, and hospital beds at a premium, nobody who is sick should set foot in the office, or anywhere outside their home or medical facility. And if someone has recently traveled to a high-risk area, or been in contact with a Coronavirus-infected person, mandate that they work from home for at least fourteen days, until the incubation period is over. You're within your rights to tell someone they can't come to work, but you have to be consistent and clear in how that policy is implemented, per the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA), so put it in writing to your team, and share it verbally. Let employees know remote work won't impact their paid leave off. For some businesses, like utilities and manufacturing, employee job duties require them to be in the work environment, but try to dig up some longstanding administrative tasks they can assist with remotely, or maybe even some feedback reports on how you could improve overall efficiencies. Unique times call for unique measures!
Optimize the Remote Work Environment
National lockdown, quarantines, cancellations, school shut-downs, and more are ramping up the pressure for businesses to adopt a work-from-home policy. Help your teams maintain some semblance of business as usual by providing the right tools to get their jobs done. Video calls and virtual whiteboards make remote work a viable option for most office workers, where a virtual environment isn't so clear cut – brick and mortar shops, construction businesses, and real estate firms, for example – think outside the box. Can you shift to an e-commerce model, offer virtual consultations, or promote online open houses? Consult with your team to offer the tools they need to work effectively.