Please check your inbox for the policy template.
A formal commitment by an organisation to treat all employees and applicants fairly, regardless of their personal characteristics. It guarantees that employment decisions, such as hiring, promotions, training, and pay, are based solely on an individual’s qualifications, abilities, and performance, rather than on prejudice or bias.
This policy is essential for legal compliance, fostering a diverse workforce, and ensuring a respectful and merit-based culture.
The policy explicitly lists the grounds upon which discrimination is prohibited. While this list is guided by local law, common protected characteristics generally include:
The policy defines and prohibits all forms of unfair treatment:
The policy commits to applying fair standards across all stages of employment:
The policy must provide a clear mechanism for employees to report violations:
This policy covers everyone linked to the organisation.
This includes:
The Human Resources department manages this policy. It makes sure everyone follows equal opportunity rules and anti-discrimination laws. HR manages training, checks compliance, addresses concerns, and ensures fair treatment in all employment practices. Managers must ensure fair behavior in their teams. They should also address issues quickly rather than hoping they will disappear on their own.
This policy starts when a candidate applies for a job and stays in effect during their entire employment. It includes recruitment, onboarding, promotions, and compensation. It also covers performance evaluations, workplace interactions, exits, and company activities. This applies to all communications, including digital platforms and remote work settings.
The organisation is dedicated to creating a fair and inclusive workplace. It respects everyone and is free from discrimination. This includes race, gender, age, religion, disability, sexual orientation, marital status, nationality, or any other protected characteristic. All employment decisions must be based solely on merit, role requirements, and performance.
Discriminatory behavior, biased decisions, harassment, or retaliation break this policy. These actions can lead to disciplinary measures. Employees should follow these principles. If they see violations, they must report them through HR channels.
This policy is your legal insurance against costly lawsuits and claims of bias. By clearly defining prohibited behaviors, it protects the company’s reputation and ensures all decisions, from hiring to promotion, are based only on merit and skill. This focus on fairness unlocks your company’s full talent potential and solidifies a trustworthy, ethical culture.
A protected characteristic is any personal trait that cannot legally be used as a basis for discrimination in employment decisions. This typically includes gender, religion, caste, disability, race, and age.
No, the POSH Policy specifically addresses sexual harassment. The Anti-discrimination Policy has a broader scope, prohibiting all forms of unfair treatment and harassment based on any protected characteristic other than sexual nature.
Direct discrimination is openly treating someone worse because of a protected trait (e.g., rejecting a female candidate for a role based on gender). Indirect discrimination is a neutral rule that unfairly impacts people of a particular group (e.g., a height requirement unrelated to the job).
If you believe the decision was based on a protected characteristic (not just simple favoritism), you should report it through the policy’s Grievance Redressal Mechanism. The policy guarantees a prompt, unbiased investigation into the unfair employment practice.