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HR Administration and Office Management Risk Assessment

HR Administration and Office Management Risk Assessment

  • 100% Compliant with Australian WHS Acts & Regulations
  • Fully Editable MS Word & PDF Formats Included
  • Pre-filled Content – Ready to Deploy Immediately
  • Customisable – Easily Add Your Logo & Site Details
  • Includes 2 Years of Free Compliance Updates

HR Administration and Office Management Risk Assessment

Product Overview

Identify and control organisational risks associated with HR administration, office management and corporate support functions using this comprehensive HR Administration and Office Management Risk Assessment. This management-level tool supports Due Diligence under the WHS Act, helping to demonstrate effective WHS Risk Management and reduce operational and governance liability exposure.

Risk Categories & Hazards Covered

This document assesses risks and outlines management controls for:

  • Governance, WHS Duties and Consultation: Assessment of officer due diligence obligations, PCBU responsibilities, consultation arrangements, and integration of WHS duties into HR and office governance frameworks.
  • Workload Management & Task Prioritisation: Management of excessive workload, time pressure, unrealistic deadlines, role clarity, and resourcing to minimise fatigue and psychosocial harm.
  • Psychosocial Risk Management: Systems for preventing and responding to stress, conflict, bullying, harassment, discrimination, and performance-related psychosocial risks across HR and office teams.
  • Information Security, Privacy & Confidentiality: Protocols for secure handling of personal and sensitive information, access controls, confidentiality agreements, data breach response, and secure disposal of records.
  • HR Policy, Contracts & Legal Compliance: Oversight of HR policies, employment contracts, Fair Work and WHS alignment, consultation on policy changes, and controls to prevent non-compliance and disputes.
  • Recruitment, Onboarding & Background Checks: Management of recruitment processes, pre-employment screening, verification and background checks, induction programs, and role-specific WHS and conduct expectations.
  • Payroll, Remuneration & Entitlements: Controls for accurate payroll administration, award and enterprise agreement compliance, superannuation, leave entitlements, and segregation of duties to reduce fraud and error.
  • Performance Management & Employment Changes: Structured processes for performance reviews, feedback, disciplinary action, restructures, redundancies, and terminations to reduce legal, psychosocial and industrial risk.
  • Office Administration, Meetings & Facilities: Management of office layout, amenities, meeting practices, visitor management, emergency procedures, and coordination with facilities and building management.
  • Digital Systems, Software & Data Management: Risk controls for HRIS, payroll and office software, user access, cybersecurity, system reliability, backups, and business continuity arrangements.
  • External Relationships & Contracted Services: Oversight of labour hire, contractors, dealer partnerships and outsourced HR or payroll providers, including due diligence, service level agreements and WHS consultation.
  • Planning, Budgeting & Organisational Change: Integration of WHS and people risk into strategic planning, budgeting, restructures, mergers, technology changes and other organisational change initiatives.
  • Documentation, Recordkeeping & Auditability: Systems for maintaining accurate HR and WHS records, retention schedules, version control, audit trails, and evidence of consultation and management decisions.

Who is this for?

This Risk Assessment is designed for Business Owners, Senior Executives, HR Managers and Office Managers responsible for planning, governing and overseeing HR administration and office management functions across the organisation.

Hazards & Risks Covered

Hazard Risk Description
1. Governance, WHS Duties and Consultation for HR & Office Functions
  • • Lack of clear allocation of WHS duties for HR, payroll and office management roles
  • • Inadequate consultation with workers on WHS changes related to HR policies and office procedures
  • • Inconsistent application of WHS Act 2011 duties in HR processes (e.g. performance management, recruitment, contract changes)
  • • Insufficient senior management oversight of psychosocial and administrative workload risks
  • • Failure to integrate WHS risk considerations into strategic HR initiatives and annual planning
  • • Poor communication channels for escalating serious WHS-related HR issues to senior leadership
2. Workload Management, Time Pressure and Task Prioritisation
  • • Unrealistic deadlines for administration duties under time pressure (payroll cut-offs, budget forecasting, reporting)
  • • Excessive multitasking across HR, payroll, office administration and dealer partnership support
  • • Lack of structured workload planning during peak periods (end of month, end of financial year, performance cycles, recruitment drives)
  • • Inadequate staffing levels or backfill arrangements during annual leave and unplanned absences
  • • Pressure to complete detailed paperwork after each job without sufficient time allocation or quality checks
  • • Burnout and chronic stress resulting from ongoing high workload with limited recovery time
3. Psychosocial Risk Management (Stress, Conflict, Harassment, Performance)
  • • Stress associated with handling complaints, performance appraisal reviews and disciplinary processes
  • • Exposure to aggressive, distressed or unreasonable behaviour during HR interactions
  • • Anxiety arising from handling sensitive employee information and serious conduct issues
  • • Poorly managed performance reviews leading to perceptions of unfairness, bullying or victimisation
  • • Lack of clear procedures for managing workplace conflict and psychosocial hazards within office teams
  • • Stigma or fear of reprisal preventing staff from raising psychosocial concerns
4. Information Security, Privacy and Confidentiality Management
  • • Unauthorised access to sensitive and confidential information such as payroll data, performance records and medical information
  • • Inadequate access controls for HR information systems and shared network drives
  • • Improper handling, storage or disposal of physical documents containing personal and commercial-in-confidence data
  • • Use of unsecured channels when escalating serious issues to senior management or external parties
  • • Inadequate training on privacy legislation, company confidentiality requirements and records management standards
  • • Reputational and legal risk from privacy breaches and data loss incidents
5. HR Policy, Employment Contracts and Legal Compliance Management
  • • Misinterpretation of convoluted legal documents, awards, enterprise agreements and partnership contracts
  • • Errors in permanent employment contract changes due to lack of legal review or version control
  • • Inconsistent application of HR policies leading to claims of unfair treatment or discrimination
  • • Inadequate systems to ensure compliance with legislative changes (Fair Work, WHS, privacy, discrimination law)
  • • Failure to identify WHS implications within partnership contracts, dealer agreements and third-party arrangements
  • • Overreliance on a single individual’s knowledge for interpreting complex legal and industrial instruments
6. Recruitment, Onboarding and Background Operations
  • • Inadequate vetting and background checks for staff recruitment, increasing risk of misconduct or safety breaches
  • • Poorly defined role descriptions leading to mismatched competencies and unsafe work practices
  • • Insufficient onboarding and induction regarding WHS responsibilities, HR policies and use of specific online software systems
  • • Failure to verify licences, qualifications or right-to-work documentation before employment commences
  • • Time pressure to fill positions resulting in shortcuts to recruitment processes and background operations
  • • Lack of structured feedback and probation review processes, allowing performance and conduct issues to persist
7. Payroll Administration, Remuneration and Entitlement Systems
  • • Payroll errors due to complex award interpretation, convoluted legal documents and manual data entry
  • • Incorrect calculation of annual leave, personal leave and other entitlements, causing stress, disputes and financial harm
  • • System failures or inadequate backup processes for payroll software and financial records
  • • Inadequate segregation of duties within payroll processing, increasing risk of fraud or undetected error
  • • High time pressure around payroll cut-offs, increasing error likelihood and worker stress
  • • Poor communication of payroll changes, deductions or adjustments, leading to conflict and mistrust
8. Performance Management, Appraisals and Employment Changes
  • • Poorly structured performance appraisal reviews leading to conflict, grievances or psychological harm
  • • Inconsistent documentation of performance concerns and employment contract changes
  • • Lack of guidance for managers on conducting fair and lawful performance and capability processes
  • • Failure to align performance expectations with documented position descriptions and organisational policies
  • • Insufficient oversight of permanent employment contract changes, creating legal and equity risks
  • • Stress and anxiety in staff resulting from unclear expectations and ad hoc feedback
9. Office Administration, Meetings and Facilities Management
  • • Poorly coordinated meeting room bookings leading to conflict, delays and increased time pressure
  • • Lack of clear ownership for office administrative tasks, causing confusion and duplicated or missed work
  • • Inadequate emergency planning and communication for office-based workers and visitors
  • • Insufficient procedures for managing building access, contractor attendance and dealer partnership visits
  • • Substandard ergonomics and workstation setups that are not systematically managed
  • • Inefficient administrative processes resulting in extended screen time and reduced opportunity for breaks
10. Digital Systems, Software and Data Management
  • • Errors arising from unfamiliarity with specific online software systems used for HR, payroll, budgeting and market data collation
  • • System downtime or data loss impacting critical HR and administrative functions
  • • Lack of standardisation across platforms used to collate market data through various software
  • • Insufficient training on new or upgraded systems, leading to workarounds and unsafe data practices
  • • Use of personal devices or unsecured networks to perform HR and payroll tasks remotely
  • • Over-complex system interfaces contributing to cognitive load, time pressure and mistakes
11. External Relationships, Dealer Partnerships and Contracted Services
  • • Ambiguous responsibilities for WHS and HR processes in dealer partnerships and external service arrangements
  • • Inadequate due diligence on dealer and partner WHS systems and employment practices
  • • Poorly controlled information flows when managing partnership contracts review and dealer partnership management
  • • Escalation of serious issues to senior management without clear protocols for involving external partners
  • • Disputes arising from misaligned expectations regarding service levels, confidentiality and legal obligations
  • • Psychosocial strain on staff managing high-stakes commercial and contractual relationships
12. Planning, Budgeting and Organisational Change Management
  • • Poor integration of WHS considerations into budget forecasting and annual leave planning
  • • Under-resourcing HR and office management functions during organisational change or growth periods
  • • Failure to assess WHS impacts of restructures, new software implementations or process redesigns
  • • Inadequate communication to staff about changes affecting their roles, workload and job security
  • • Compressed timelines for implementation of new systems or structures increasing error and stress
  • • Lack of monitoring of post-change impacts on workload, psychosocial risks and compliance
13. Documentation, Recordkeeping and Auditability
  • • Incomplete or inaccurate documentation of HR decisions, performance reviews and contract changes
  • • Inability to demonstrate compliance with WHS Act 2011 and Fair Work requirements during audits or disputes
  • • Fragmented storage of critical records across email, paper files and multiple systems
  • • Loss of organisational knowledge when key HR or payroll staff leave
  • • Overly complex documentation requirements discouraging proper recordkeeping
  • • Failure to record and track remedial actions after incidents or complaints

Need to add specific hazards for your workplace?

Don't worry if a specific hazard isn't listed above. Once you purchase, simply log in to your Client Portal and add your own custom hazards at no extra cost. We take care of the hard work—creating the risk ratings and control measures for free—to ensure your document is compliant within minutes.

Legislation & References

This document was researched and developed to align with:

  • Work Health and Safety Act 2011
  • Work Health and Safety Regulations 2017
  • AS/NZS ISO 31000:2018: Risk management — Guidelines
  • Fair Work Act 2009: National workplace relations system and minimum employment standards.
  • Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) and Australian Privacy Principles (APPs): Requirements for handling personal and sensitive information.
  • Safe Work Australia – Model Code of Practice: How to Manage Work Health and Safety Risks: Framework for identifying, assessing and controlling workplace risks.
  • Safe Work Australia – Model Code of Practice: Managing Psychosocial Hazards at Work: Guidance on managing stress, conflict, bullying and other psychosocial risks.
  • AS ISO 45001:2018: Occupational health and safety management systems — Requirements with guidance for use.
  • AS ISO/IEC 27001:2023: Information security management systems — Requirements (relevant to HR and office information security controls).
  • Records Management Standards (e.g. AS ISO 15489): Information and documentation — Records management principles for HR and corporate records.

Standard Risk Assessment Features (Click to Expand)
  • Comprehensive hazard identification for all activities
  • Risk rating matrix with likelihood and consequence analysis
  • Existing control measures evaluation
  • Residual risk assessment after controls
  • Hierarchy of controls recommendations
  • Action priority rankings
  • Review and monitoring requirements
  • Consultation and communication records
  • Legal compliance references
  • Sign-off and approval sections

$79.5

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