
Why this perception shows up in growing businesses
In smaller businesses, HR roles are often created reactively.
HR is brought in to:
- reduce risk
- professionalise processes
- manage conflict
- protect the business
But the authority, scope and decision rights are not always clearly defined.
When HR is unclear on whether they are:
- advisers
- decision makers
- employee advocates
- compliance gatekeepers
misalignment is almost inevitable.
What HR is actually meant to do
HR is meant to:
- advise on risk
- support lawful and fair decisions
- ensure process integrity
- reduce exposure for the business
HR is not meant to:
- override leadership decisions
- act as legal counsel
- advocate for one party
- replace management accountability
Problems arise when HR advice is interpreted as alignment with one side rather than guidance on process and risk.
Why HR can appear to side with employees
This perception often forms when HR:
- focuses heavily on procedural fairness
- highlights employee rights without context
- challenges management decisions publicly
- slows down action without offering alternatives
In many cases, HR is attempting to prevent risk.
However, without commercial framing, that caution can feel like opposition.
When HR advice is actually protecting the business
There are situations where HR is right to push back.
This is usually when:
- decisions are rushed or emotional
- documentation does not support the outcome
- termination follows a complaint or leave
- managers have acted inconsistently
- the risk profile is genuinely high
In these moments, HR caution is not employee advocacy.
It is business protection.
The issue is not the advice itself, but how it is delivered and understood.
When HR alignment becomes a real problem
HR alignment becomes problematic when:
- HR positions itself as the final decision maker
- leadership feels unable to act
- managers stop escalating issues
- employees learn to bypass management
This creates:
- authority confusion
- slower decision making
- cultural erosion
- increased risk over time
HR should support leadership, not replace it.
The cost of unresolved HR misalignment
When this tension is left unresolved:
- managers disengage
- performance issues linger
- termination decisions stall
- founders are pulled back into daily people issues
This is often when businesses start questioning whether internal HR is helping or hindering growth.
Why this happens more with internal HR than outsourced HR
Internal HR can struggle when:
- reporting lines are unclear
- HR sits between competing leaders
- risk aversion becomes self protection
- relationships become political
Outsourced HR avoids many of these issues because it:
- has clearer advisory boundaries
- is not embedded in internal dynamics
- focuses on outcomes rather than influence
- supports leadership authority
This is why many growing businesses find outsourced HR more effective at this stage.
What good HR alignment actually looks like
Aligned HR support:
- presents options rather than ultimatums
- explains risk in plain language
- supports leadership decisions once made
- challenges respectfully and privately
It does not:
- undermine managers
- create fear based advice
- block decisions without alternatives
Good HR advice creates clarity, not camps.
How leaders should respond if this is happening
If HR feels misaligned, the solution is not avoidance.
Leaders should:
- clarify decision authority
- define HR’s role explicitly
- align on risk tolerance
- reset expectations around advice versus decisions
In many cases, a reset conversation resolves the issue quickly.
If it does not, the structure may be wrong for the stage of the business.
Where HR support adds the most value here
HR support is most valuable when it:
- balances fairness with commercial reality
- supports managers through difficult decisions
- reduces escalation rather than fuelling it
- reinforces leadership authority
This is where outsourced HR often provides a circuit breaker for growing businesses.
FAQs
Before HR becomes a blocker
If HR feels like it is taking sides, the issue is usually structure, clarity or expectation, not intent.
The right HR support should make decisions easier, not harder.

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