Skip over main navigation
  • Log in
  • Basket: (0 items)
Involvement & Participation Association
Contact Us
Menu
  • About IPA
    • Who are IPA?
    • Our team
      • The IPA Team
      • Work Insight Group
    • History
    • Reports and accounts
    • Contact
  • What we do
    • Overview of services
    • Strengthening Employment Relations
    • Learning and development
      • Learning and development programmes
      • Programmes for managers
      • Programmes for employee representatives
    • Diagnostic reviews
    • Workplace elections
    • Speak at events
  • Evidence & Research
    • Making the case for employee voice
    • Making the case for diversity and inclusion
    • Making the case for employee engagement
    • Creating employee engagement
    • Collaborative working
    • Research publications
    • Case studies
    • Factsheets
    • Podcasts
  • IPA Membership
    • Corporate membership
  • Support us
    • Campaign
    • Other ways to support
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Events
    • Employee Voice Hub
    • Jobs
  • Admin
    • Log in
  • Basket: (0 items)
  • How to build better relationships with your Trade Unions
  1. Evidence & Research
  2. Collaborative working

How to build better relationships with your Trade Unions

Working Collaboratively

The IPA has sought input from a wide range of business leaders, trade unionists and academics who helped us to establish the following underlying principles of working collaboratively:

Joint commitment to the success of the organisation

Joint recognition of each other’s legitimate interests

Joint commitment to employment security

Joint focus on the quality of working life

Joint commitment to operating in a transparent manner

Joint commitment to add value to the arrangement

These principles translate into common features that are associated with this way of working.  For example, employees show a strong commitment to the goals of the business and are flexible in their approach to achieving these goals.  The organisation listens and understands employee concerns and actively pursues policies to address such issues wherever possible.  Collaborative working is a relationship based on the satisfaction of mutual as well as separate interests with respect given by both parties to those separate interests. It works best when a union thinks about the business and business thinks about the workforce before any decision is made or any action is taken.  By doing so, a virtuous circle, not a vicious circle, is achieved.

Contact us for more information

Find out more about...

What are the behaviours needed for collaborative working?

Expand

All of this depends on how the managers and union representatives get on with each other and, more importantly, how much they trust each other. If managers take union representatives into their confidence by sharing ideas and information at the earliest stage, they have to know that this trust will not be breached. This is probably the most critical aspect of collaborative working and presents as big a challenge to the trade union representative as it does to the manager. Openness and honesty results in a big increase in responsibility for all of those involved in collaborative working. This takes time to achieve.

A manager should feel comfortable with bringing any issue to the attention of a union representative in the knowledge that any response would be calm and considered. In turn, the union representative should feel comfortable with bringing any issue to the attention of a manager in the knowledge that it will be considered seriously. All parties should communicate in a cordial manner without threats or a reversion back to “command and control” styles.

Published: 1st November, 2017

Updated: 15th December, 2023

Author:

Share this page
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

What does collaborative working mean for a manager?

Expand

The requirement for change is often very similar for managers. Middle managers are usually cited as one of the main reasons why collaborative working fails but this is often because they are not engaged in the process. It is natural to feel disenfranchised when this happens.  

Managers have no reason to feel threatened by this way of working. They have a right to manage and the final decision is theirs; the difference is that the business case is being made available to the union representatives openly, honestly and at the earliest stage possible.  A manager must be equipped with the skills to respond positively to challenges and should accept employees’ desire for information, representation and consultation before decisions are taken. 

Collaborative working should help a manager achieve their objectives. Being able to run ideas past a union representative and thus gauge the potential response of the staff, can only help the decision making process. An idea might be modified to take account of this or it might not but, at the very least, the reaction to a decision is known.

Published: 1st November, 2017

Updated: 15th December, 2023

Author:

Share this page
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

What does collaborative working mean for a trade union representative?

Expand

It is accepted that collaborative working may make the job of a union representative more demanding because they have to think about potential business impacts when requesting the maintenance of or improvements to existing terms and conditions. It also requires an acceptance of the management’s right to manage and make the final decision.

This does not mean that a union representative has to agree with everything that is placed in front of him or her. The difference is that any objection should be supported by something more than ideology. If a challenge is made to a business decision, it should be made in such a way as to facilitate a meaningful discussion. Once a decision is made, however, the representative must have a clear understanding of why as it is vital that this is explained to the membership and the staff.

Published: 1st November, 2017

Updated: 15th December, 2023

Author:

Share this page
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

How do organisations benefit from collaborative working?

Expand

Benefits of working collaboratively

Working collaboratively is built on principles and practices of shared commitment between the organisation and the people who work there.  This should produce the following business benefits:

  • Change implemented with assistance rather than resistance
  • Competitive edge for the organisation
  • Dealing with issues before they become problems
  • Less bureaucracy
  • Fewer, if any, tribunal cases
  • Higher levels of staff retention
  • Greater ability to recruit high quality staff
  • Low levels of absenteeism
  • Less conflict
  • Better decision making

For a trade union, all of these are benefits too. There are also some specific areas that a trade union working this way will benefit from:

  • Opportunity to maintain or increase its influence on company strategy
  • Opportunity to ensure that the impact of staff is considered in any decision
  • Opportunity to increase membership levels
  • Opportunity to develop the skills of the representatives to a much higher level
  • Opportunity to become an equal stakeholder within the organisation

 These are benefits to the organisation as well.

Published: 1st November, 2017

Updated: 15th December, 2023

Author:

Share this page
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

How can the IPA help?

Expand

What we do

The IPA led the way with the ground-breaking Towards Industrial Partnership project in 1992 and has been at the forefront of thinking since, publishing The Practitioners Guide to Partnership Working and now focussing on developing collaborative working within UK organisations. 

Our research activity underpins the services we provide to organisations developing collaborative working, whether taking the first steps on the journey or seeking to enhance existing ways of working.

Working closely with client organisations, the IPA team can:

  • Help you to develop new ways of working
  • Provide a diagnostic – where are you now?
  • Develop and test a road map for change     
  • Design interventions such as vision workshops and training at all levels of the organisation looking at appropriate skills and behaviours
  • Ensure that organisations are getting the most from their partnership

What they say - Guernsey Post Limited

Guernsey Post asked Nita to help the company extend their approach to partnership working with the CWU.  Based on a series of interviews, Nita presented her findings at a joint workshop where senior union representatives and managers agreed a way forward.

"We really appreciated the way Nita put together the workshop it was  stretching, lively and interesting for all concerned. It helped us to move our partnership approach on another step - a vital factor in meeting the continuing challenges for our people and our business". 

- Steve Rains, HR Director, Guernsey Post Limited

Published: 1st November, 2017

Updated: 15th December, 2023

Author:

Share this page
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
Back to top

Latest

  • Beyond rhetoric: what is really sustaining – or undermining – DEI in UK workplaces?

    Beyond rhetoric: what is really sustaining – or undermining – DEI in UK workplaces?

    Diversity, equality and inclusion (DEI) has not disappeared from organisational agendas, but it is under pressure. It feels more fragile, more contested, and harder to sustain than it did a few years ago. Dr Meenakshi Krishnan, Principal Research Fellow at IES reflects on what is driving inclusion and fairness in organisations right now? How are current labour market challenges strengthening or complicating the case for DEI? And what would make DEI feel like core business?

  • What new sectoral bargaining could mean for pay and workforce stability

    What new sectoral bargaining could mean for pay and workforce stability

    Naomi Cooke, Head of Workforce at the Local Government Association, reflects on what the introduction of a new model of sectoral bargaining could mean for local government employers and beyond. The Employment Rights Act represents a real sea-change.  Two comparatively small provisions denote a significant shift in how pay, terms and conditions will be set, by establishing the first statutory collective pay bargaining mechanisms in England since wage councils were abolished in the 1990s.

  • IPA Employee Voice Survey

    IPA Employee Voice Survey

    Strong employee voice helps organisations make better decisions, manage change more effectively and build trust at work. To understand how this works in practice, we asked employee representatives, forum and staff council chairs, and others involved in voice arrangements to share their experiences via an online survey.

  • The five disruptors of the UK industrial model

    The five disruptors of the UK industrial model

    With prescience and clarity, the outgoing Chair of ACAS, Clare Chapman, in a recent address to the IPA’s Work Insights Network identified the five ‘disruptors’ which are upending the UK’s industrial model. IPA director, Nita Clarke OBE considers how the political and policy response to these disruptors will determine the shape and success of our economy going forward. April 2026

Most read

  • Why is diversity, equality and inclusion important?

    Why is diversity, equality and inclusion important?

    There is barely an organisation that does not pay lip service to the importance of diversity, equality and inclusion in their company vision.

  • What is Employee Voice?

    What is Employee Voice?

    Employee voice exists, whether you recognise it or not. The only question is – "are you listening?"

  • Statutory Employee Consultation and the Role of the Employee Representative

    Employment law requires organisations to collectively inform and consult with its employees in relation to certain proposed changes

  • Who are IPA?

    The IPA is the UK's leading organisation delivering new ways of working based on employee participation, collaboration and trust.

  • What is Engagement?

    What is Engagement?

    Employee engagement is seen by a growing number of organisations as a key issue in measuring employee attitudes and establishing a strong employer brand.

  • The Business Case for Employee Voice

    Outlining the evidence supporting the business case for listening to the workforce.

  • Staff Forum or Trade Union. Why not both?

    Staff Forum or Trade Union. Why not both?

    There is continuing debate about whether a staff forum can be as effective as a trade union.

  • Is Thursday the new Friday? The future of working time

    Is Thursday the new Friday? The future of working time

    This paper by IPA on behalf of FES lays out the current state of the UK debate around working time reductions and the campaign for a four-day week.

  • Nita Clarke OBE

    Nita Clarke OBE

    Director

  • Learning and development programmes

    Learning and development programmes

    The IPA offers a range of training and consultancy services for managers and employee representatives, to improve engagement, productivity and set up effective employee voice structures.

Sign up for our newsletter

Please enter your first name
Please enter your last name
Please enter your email address Please enter a valid email address (e.g. [email protected])
  • Sitemap
  • Accessibility
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • Bluesky

Involvement & Participation Association (IPA) is part of the Institute for Employment Studies (IES) a company limited by guarantee registered in England and Wales under number 931547 and registered as a charity number 258390

Registered office Citygate, 185 Dyke Road, Brighton BN3 1TL

Manage Cookie Preferences