Ad hoc HR is riskier than it feels: here’s why
Risk from informal HR doesn’t announce itself. It builds quietly, through inconsistent onboarding, undocumented policies,...
Running a small business in Australia comes with a job most owners never signed up for: HR compliance officer. Every employer with at least one staff member carries legal obligations under the Fair Work Act 2009, the National Employment Standards (NES), modern awards, and the Superannuation Guarantee. None of this is optional, and none of it scales down just because the team is small.
Citation Group’s 2026 Workforce Pulse, a national study of 510 Australian business leaders, found that 44 per cent of businesses have no clear approach to HR and people management, and that 38 per cent of small businesses manage HR entirely ad hoc, compared with just 11 per cent of large businesses.
Ad hoc people management can be stressful and time-consuming: say compliance is more complex than it’s ever been, and 62 per cent say managing it limits their focus on growth.
The easiest way to close this gap is to start with the basics:
Pro tip: set a calendar reminder for June each year to review award classifications and pay rates ahead of the 1 July wage increase. It takes less than an hour and heads off one of the most common compliance failures around.
Risk from informal HR doesn’t announce itself. It builds quietly, through inconsistent onboarding, undocumented policies, and weak systems for tracking award changes. By the time the risk surfaces in an underpayment claim or a dismissal dispute it’s already too late.
The practical fallout tends to look like this.
The Fair Work Act applies to nearly every private-sector employer, regardless of size. Being small doesn’t reduce the obligations. It usually just means fewer resources to manage them.
Pro tip: a probation period doesn’t remove NES entitlements, though it does affect unfair dismissal protections. Document the terms clearly in every contract from day one.
When HR runs on proper systems and expert support, the payoff is concrete. Automated payroll and HR platforms cut the hours lost to manual record-keeping and payslip admin. Proactive classification and pay reviews catch errors before they become claims, which costs a fraction of what a dispute would.
Documented policies and consistent onboarding set clear expectations from day one, so there’s less to argue about later. Have an expert tracking changes to awards, super, and employment law, so nobody’s scrambling every June.
The benefit most owners underestimate is headspace. Not fielding ad hoc HR questions, or wondering whether a contract will hold up, frees up real capacity for customers, strategy, and growth. None of this needs a large HR department. It needs the right systems and the right advice at the right time.
Citation Group has supported Australian businesses for more than 30 years, since its founding as FCB Group in 1993, and now works with over 25,000 businesses across Australia. Our team fields more than 40,000 advisory calls a year, and our clients save up to 600 hours a year on HR Admin.
Through Citation HR, Citation Legal, enableHR, and foundU, we cover employment contracts, award classification, payroll, onboarding, and ongoing compliance monitoring. Whether you’re hiring your first employee or managing a team of 50, our goal is the same: help you stay compliant and keep growing. Contact us here to see how we can help.