Hiring ex-offenders and homeless morally right, says M&S

-

Hiring people from disadvantaged groups is not only “ethically right” but benefits business, according to the HR director of Marks and Spencer.

Speaking at the Talent Pipeline Conference, organised by the Employers Forum on Age and Employers Forum on Belief, Tanith Dodge outlined how the retailer encouraged a workforce diverse in age, and was working with the third sector to deliver development programmes for ex-offenders, homeless people and school leavers.

“We find our work is helping people that are more disadvantaged and have difficulty finding employment, and we do it because we believe that morally and ethically it is the right thing to do”, Dodge told the delegates in London.

CIPD research from last December found that less than a quarter of employers hired staff from disadvantaged groups, including young people with few qualifications, the long-term unemployed, ex-offenders and older workers.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

“One of the challenges is to overcome a lot of people’s preconceived ideas and perceptions,” Dodge added.

Seven years ago the company launched its “Marks & Start” programme for homeless people, the conference heard, which is designed to boost the employability of people seeking to re-join the labour market by building their confidence, motivation and communication skills.

Dodge said that nearly 50 per cent of the 4,500 participants so far had gone on to enter employment – half with Marks & Spencer.

She also highlighted work the company had done with female ex-offenders, some of whom went on to become “very capable employees in our business”, and generally recorded lower levels of sickness absence than other sectors of the workforce.

Dodge also explained that while 20 per cent of M&S staff were aged between 16 and 24, the company had ceased to operate the default retirement age in 2001.

Older employees “role-modelled and mentored” younger members of staff, said Dodge, “and bridging that gap is a real business benefit.” A “buddy” scheme for new joiners had also enhanced engagement levels among recruits and the long-serving staff who help trained them, she added.

Dodge said that the company’s approach was a central part of its corporate social responsibility strategy, and called on other employers at the conference to consider recruiting people from disadvantaged groups who would otherwise be reliant on state benefits.

Latest news

Aon’s – 2026 Human Capital Trends Study

This study, based on Aon’s 2026 Human Capital Trends Survey and insights from human capital specialists, equips senior leaders with the perspective needed to navigate this shift and unlock sustainable growth.

Menopause support gaps push women out of jobs as ‘masking’ takes toll

Women consider leaving jobs as menopause symptoms go unsupported, with many hiding their condition at work.

Workers ‘ignore AI tools and stick with manual tasks’ despite heavy investment

Employees are avoiding workplace AI tools and reverting to manual tasks, raising concerns about trust, usability and the value of tech investment.

Victor Riparbelli on AI boosting the value of people

“AI will make great human communicators even more valuable than before.”
- Advertisement -

Up to 28,000 employees affected by paper-based data breaches

Thousands of workers affected by paper-based data incidents as organisations miss reporting deadlines and overlook offline risks.

Helen Wada: Why engagement initiatives fail without human-centric leadership

Workforce engagement has become a hot topic across the boardroom and beyond, particularly as hybrid working practices have become the norm.

Must read

Ian Moore: Is HR burnout about to impact your team?

Ian More explores what burnout entails, and how it may be impacting your organisation.

Stephen Smith: The benefits of remote working

A new younger workforce reflecting different attitudes to work...
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you