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5 June, 2026 by Bronwyn Coulthart Leave a Comment

How Diversity and Inclusion Drive Business Performance (Not Just Compliance)

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How Diversity and Inclusion Drive Business Performance (Not Just Compliance)

5 June, 2026
Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Business Update, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce, Workforce Planning

Diversity and inclusion are still too often framed as compliance issues—as obligations to manage, report on or address when required.

But organisations that approach them only through a compliance lens miss the bigger opportunity. Diversity and inclusion, when genuinely embedded, can drive stronger decision-making, better innovation and improved business performance.

Diversity brings difference. Different backgrounds, perspectives, experiences and ways of thinking can strengthen how teams solve problems, identify risks and generate ideas. But diversity alone is not enough. Without inclusion, those perspectives may never be heard, valued or used effectively.

That is why inclusion matters just as much as representation. An inclusive workplace is one where people feel safe to contribute, challenge ideas, ask questions and bring more of their perspective to the table. When that happens, the organisation benefits—not just culturally, but commercially.

Inclusive and diverse teams are often better equipped to understand customers, respond to complexity and avoid groupthink. They tend to ask better questions and produce stronger outcomes because they are not all approaching issues from the same angle.

Of course, compliance still matters. Businesses must meet their legal obligations and take discrimination, equity and fair treatment seriously. But reducing diversity and inclusion to compliance misses the strategic value.

The more useful question is not “How do we meet the minimum standard?” It is “How do we create an environment where difference contributes to better results?”

When diversity and inclusion are treated as business enablers rather than box-ticking exercises, organisations position themselves to perform better, adapt more effectively and build stronger cultures over time.

Get on the waitlist for my Blue Kite HR Advisory Portal, here.

 

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Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Business Update, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce, Workforce Planning

4 June, 2026 by Bronwyn Coulthart Leave a Comment

The Hybrid Workforce: What the New Working From Home Laws Actually Mean

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The Hybrid Workforce: What the New Working From Home Laws Actually Mean

4 June, 2026
Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Business Update, Career Planning, Change management, Culture, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce

I recently appeared on Ticker News to talk about one of the most significant shifts in Australian employment law in years — the new working from home legislation. But the conversation I wanted to have wasn’t just about the law. It was about everything the law assumes your business already has in place.

Because here’s the truth: most businesses don’t.

What’s Actually Changing

Let’s start with the facts, because there’s a lot of noise out there.

From 1 September 2026, Victorian employees who can reasonably perform their role from home will have a statutory right to work from home for at least two days per week. This right is being enshrined in the Equal Opportunity Act 2010, making Victoria the first jurisdiction in the world to legislate WFH as a protected entitlement.

If your business has fewer than 15 employees, you have a little more time, the law applies to you from 1 July 2027. But don’t let that lull you into inaction.

Disputes won’t go to the Fair Work Commission. They’ll go to the Victorian Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission (VEOHRC) for conciliation first, and then to VCAT if unresolved. That’s a different process, a different regulator, and a different compliance framework than most employers are used to.

And here’s what many Victorian businesses are missing: this sits on top of your existing federal obligations. Section 65 of the Fair Work Act 2009 already gives eligible employees the right to request flexible working arrangements, and since 2023, the Fair Work Commission has had the power to arbitrate when employers refuse. That means you’re operating under two frameworks simultaneously, and non-compliance with either carries real risk.

The Case Nobody Is Talking About

While everyone has been focused on the Victorian legislation, there’s a live proceeding at the Fair Work Commission that could have even broader national implications.

The case initiated by the FWC on its own motion is examining whether a working from home term should be inserted into the Clerks – Private Sector Award 2020. The Australian Services Union is seeking a presumed right to work from home when reasonably requested. Not a right to ask. A presumed right. That’s a fundamental shift in where the burden of justification sits.

Currently, employees need to justify why they should be allowed to work from home. Under the proposed model, employers would need to justify why they can’t accommodate it. The proposed clause also includes a minimum of two WFH days per week and a 26-week notice period for any employer wanting to mandate a return to office.

If this gets up, it affects approximately 1.8 million workers covered by the Clerks Award, and legal experts have been clear that it could set a precedent flowing into other modern awards.

Final hearings ran through February 2026. A determination is expected soon.

The question isn’t whether this will affect your business. The question is: are you ready if it does?

The Real Problem Nobody Is Naming

Here’s what I said on Ticker News, and I’ll say it again here: the legislation answers the question of whether people can work from home. It doesn’t answer the much harder question — whether your managers know how to lead them fairly when they do.

Most leadership capability in Australian business was built for in-person, visibility-based management. You could see who was working hard. You could catch issues in the hallway. Performance conversations happened naturally. That model doesn’t translate to hybrid, and the gap is bigger than most businesses realise.

When managers can’t rely on visibility, they default to instinct. And instinct, in a hybrid environment, is often legally risky.

Proximity Bias: The Hidden Hazard in Your Hybrid Model

There’s a specific risk I want to name, because it’s real, it’s measurable, and almost no one businesses are talking about it: proximity bias.

Research consistently shows that employees who are in the office more are perceived as harder working, more committed, and more promotable, regardless of their actual output.

It’s not deliberate discrimination. It’s a deeply human cognitive bias. But in a hybrid workforce, it creates a two-tiered workplace where remote workers are systematically disadvantaged in performance reviews, promotion decisions, and workload allocation.

Under Australia’s psychosocial hazard frameworks, exclusion and inequitable treatment are recognised risks that employers have a duty to manage. Proximity bias doesn’t just damage your culture — it creates legal exposure.

If your hybrid model is quietly favouring in-office workers without your leaders even realising it, you have a problem. And now, with legislation in place to support hybrid work, that problem has teeth.

A Policy Is Not a Strategy

I want to be direct about something. Most businesses will respond to this legislation by updating a policy document. And while that’s a necessary starting point, it is not enough.

A policy that says ’employees may work from home two days per week’ does nothing to address:

  • How performance will be fairly measured across different locations
  • How managers will communicate inclusively — not defaulting to ad hoc hallway conversations that exclude remote workers
  • How team culture is maintained when people are dispersed across home and office
  • How you’ll handle a psychosocial complaint from a remote worker who feels excluded or overlooked

The businesses that will struggle with this legislation are the ones who treat compliance as a document exercise. The ones who will get it right are the ones who treat hybrid work as a people strategy question.

What Employers Need to Do — Right Now

Whether you’re in Victoria or operating nationally, here’s the practical reality of what needs to happen before this law takes effect.

1. Know your obligations — all of them.

Victorian employers need to understand both the state framework and the federal Fair Work Act. If you operate across multiple states, your employees may have different entitlements depending on where they’re based. That complexity needs to be managed proactively, not reactively.

2. Document everything.

The Fair Work Commission has been clear: employers can refuse WFH requests, but only with genuine, written business grounds and within the required 21-day response timeframe. Verbal decisions, informal conversations, and undocumented reasoning are the decisions that end up going against employers.

3. Update both your employment agreements AND your policies.

Most businesses focus on one and neglect the other. Your employment agreements need to reflect your current hybrid arrangements. Misalignment between what your contracts say and how your workplace actually operates is a compliance risk, and one of the most common gaps I find in HR audits.

4. Build real leader capability.

Not a one-hour webinar. Not a policy to sign off on. Actual training in how to manage performance remotely, how to run inclusive hybrid team meetings, and how to identify and counteract proximity bias in their own decision-making.

5. The deadline is not September. The deadline is now.

Getting your policies right, updating your employment agreements, and building leader capability takes time. If you wait until August to start, you won’t be ready.

The Shift That Changes Everything

The law is moving — and it’s moving in one clear direction.

From ‘you need permission to work from home’ to ‘you need a reason to make someone come in.’

That is a fundamental shift in where the burden of justification sits. And most Australian businesses haven’t noticed yet.

We’re in a moment where employment law is ahead of leadership capability in most workplaces. That gap, between what the law now expects and what most managers are equipped to do, is where the risk lives. It’s also where the opportunity lives, for the businesses willing to move first.

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

Catie Paterson is the founder of Blue Kite HR Consulting, with over 20 years of experience supporting Australian businesses to build better, legally compliant workplaces. We provide practical, no-nonsense HR solutions for businesses of all sizes.

To discuss your hybrid work arrangements and what you need to have in place before September 2026, visit bluekite.au or connect with Catie on LinkedIn.

────────────────────────────────────────────────────────

This article is intended as general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For advice specific to your business and workforce, seek guidance from a qualified HR or employment law professional.

 

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Blue Kite specialises in providing
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Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Business Update, Career Planning, Change management, Culture, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce

4 June, 2026 by Bronwyn Coulthart Leave a Comment

The Role of Positive Psychology in Transforming Organisational Culture

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The Path to CPC: A World of Hotel Management, Hospitality and HR

4 June, 2026
Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Culture, HR essentials, Leadership, Life Experiences, Onboarding, Workforce

When people hear the term positive psychology, they sometimes assume it is about forced optimism or ignoring difficult issues.

In reality, positive psychology is far more practical—and far more powerful—than that. In workplace settings, it offers a valuable framework for helping organisations build healthier cultures, stronger teams and more sustainable performance.

At its core, positive psychology focuses on what helps people function well. That includes strengths, motivation, resilience, meaning, connection and the conditions that allow individuals and teams to thrive. It does not deny problems. Instead, it asks a different question: what is already working, and how can we build more of it?

This is particularly relevant to organisational culture. Many businesses focus heavily on what is broken—poor behaviours, performance gaps, conflict or disengagement. While these issues do need attention, culture transformation cannot be built on correction alone. It also requires a deliberate focus on what supports trust, energy, contribution and growth.

A positive psychology approach might involve helping leaders identify and use strengths more effectively, building recognition into team routines, creating more psychologically safe environments or designing work in ways that increase autonomy and meaning.

These are not “soft” ideas. They have practical impact. When people feel valued, connected and capable, they are more likely to engage, collaborate and perform consistently.

Transforming culture is not about putting a positive spin on serious issues. It is about creating the right conditions for people and organisations to function at their best. Positive psychology gives businesses a useful lens through which to do exactly that.

Get on the waitlist for my Blue Kite HR Advisory Portal, here.

 

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Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Culture, HR essentials, Leadership, Life Experiences, Onboarding, Workforce

3 June, 2026 by Bronwyn Coulthart Leave a Comment

Redefining Leadership: Moving Beyond Traditional Management in Modern Workplaces

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The Path to CPC: A World of Hotel Management, Hospitality and HR

3 June, 2026
Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Change management, External HR Support, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce

Many leadership models still rely on outdated assumptions: that leaders should direct, control, monitor closely and have most of the answers.

But modern workplaces are changing too quickly for traditional management alone to be effective.

What businesses need now is a different kind of leadership—one built on trust, clarity, adaptability and influence.

Today’s employees are not simply looking for instruction. They want direction, context, meaningful feedback and leaders who can create the conditions for good work to happen. That requires far more than technical expertise or positional authority. It requires emotional intelligence, sound judgment and the ability to bring people with you.

Redefining leadership does not mean lowering standards or removing accountability. In fact, it often means the opposite. Strong modern leaders are clear in their expectations, but they do not rely on control as their primary tool. They empower people, encourage ownership and create an environment where issues can be discussed early and honestly.

This is especially important in workplaces navigating hybrid work, rapid change, shifting employee expectations and increasing complexity. Leaders who default to old management habits—micromanagement, poor communication, reactive decision-making—can quickly erode trust and capability in their teams.

The most effective leaders today are not simply managers of tasks. They are shapers of culture, facilitators of performance and enablers of growth.

For businesses serious about the future, leadership development must move beyond traditional management training. The goal is no longer just to produce competent managers. It is to develop intentional leaders who can build trust, strengthen culture and lead people well in a very different world of work.

Get on the waitlist for my Blue Kite HR Advisory Portal, here.

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Blue Kite specialises in providing
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Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Change management, External HR Support, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce

2 June, 2026 by Bronwyn Coulthart Leave a Comment

Why Employee Wellbeing Will Be the Next Competitive Advantage

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Why Employee Wellbeing Will Be the Next Competitive Advantage

2 June, 2026
Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Business Update, Culture, HR essentials, Workforce

For years, employee wellbeing was often treated as a “nice to have”—something associated with morning teas, wellness apps or occasional reminders to take breaks.

That approach is no longer enough. In today’s environment, wellbeing is becoming a serious business issue and, increasingly, a genuine competitive advantage.

When employees are consistently overloaded, unclear on priorities or working in psychologically unsafe environments, the impact is never limited to morale. It shows up in productivity, decision-making, absenteeism, turnover and team performance. Poor wellbeing costs businesses far more than many leaders realise.

On the other hand, organisations that prioritise wellbeing in a meaningful way tend to build stronger, more sustainable performance. Their people are more engaged. Their leaders are better equipped to respond early to pressure points. Their teams are more likely to stay, contribute and adapt during change.

Importantly, employee wellbeing is not about creating a softer workplace. It is about creating a smarter one. It means thinking carefully about workload, leadership behaviour, communication, role clarity, support systems and the overall employee experience. It means recognising that people perform better when they are not operating in a constant state of stress or depletion.

The businesses that understand this will have a clear advantage. They will retain stronger talent, reduce preventable people risks and build healthier cultures that support long-term results.

In the years ahead, wellbeing will not sit on the sidelines of business strategy. It will be part of what sets high-performing organisations apart.

Get on the waitlist for my Blue Kite HR Advisory Portal, here.

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cpaterson@bluekite.au

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Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Business Update, Culture, HR essentials, Workforce

1 June, 2026 by Bronwyn Coulthart Leave a Comment

The Future of HR: How SMEs Can Lead the Way in Workplace Innovation

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The Future of HR: How SMEs Can Lead the Way in Workplace Innovation

1 June, 2026
Filed Under: Advisory and compliance, Culture, HR essentials, Leadership, Workforce

For many small and medium-sized businesses, HR is still viewed as a support function—something focused on contracts, policies, onboarding and problem-solving when issues arise.

But the future of HR looks very different. For SMEs in particular, HR has the potential to become one of the most powerful drivers of innovation, adaptability, sustainable growth and profitability.

Unlike large organisations, SMEs are often less burdened by bureaucracy. They can make decisions faster, test new ideas more quickly and embed cultural change without waiting for multiple layers of sign-off. That creates a real opportunity. SMEs can lead the way in workplace innovation by rethinking how work is structured, how leaders are developed and how employees are supported to perform at their best.

Workplace innovation is not just about introducing new technology. It is about creating better ways of working. That might include more flexible work arrangements, clearer accountability, stronger feedback loops, better leadership capability or a more intentional focus on culture and wellbeing.

The businesses that will stand out in the coming years are not necessarily the biggest. They will be the ones willing to ask better questions: Are our people systems helping us grow? Are our leaders equipped for the workplace we have now—not the one we had five years ago? Are we designing work in a way that supports performance and engagement?

For SMEs, the future of HR is not about catching up. It is about leading with agility, clarity and intention.

Get on the waitlist for my Blue Kite HR Advisory Portal, here.

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