17Apr

HR Audit: The Hidden Risk Costing You Money

By Chippy Jayaprakash, Founder & CEO, Level UP HR Solutions

Most business owners think an HR Audit is something only large corporations worry about. That assumption is expensive.

If you run a growing company in India — whether you have 20 employees or 200 — your HR practices are either protecting your business or quietly creating risk. An HR audit tells you exactly which one.

So, what is an HR audit?

An HR audit is a structured, independent review of your company’s HR policies, practices, documentation, and compliance status. It examines everything from employment contracts and leave records to payroll accuracy, statutory contributions, and employee data management.

Think of it as a financial audit — but for your people practices.

A thorough HR audit covers:

  • Employment documentation — Are your offer letters, appointment letters, and contracts legally sound and up to date?
  • Statutory compliance — Are you meeting your obligations under the Shops & Establishments Act, PF, ESI, Gratuity, and labour welfare regulations?
  • Payroll accuracy — Are salaries calculated correctly? Are TDS deductions, PF contributions, and payslips compliant with applicable rules?
  • HR policies and handbooks — Do you have a written policy for leave, code of conduct, POSH, grievance redressal, and disciplinary procedures?
  • Employee records — Is your employee data complete, organised, and accessible during an inspection or audit?
  • Onboarding and exit processes — Are your joining formalities and full-and-final settlements handled correctly?
Why do Indian SMEs avoid HR audits?

Three common reasons:

  1. “We’re too small to need it.” — Size doesn’t exempt you from compliance. A 25-person company is just as liable under the PF Act or the POSH Act as a 250-person one.
  2. “We’ll do it when we scale.” — By the time you scale, the gaps are already there — and harder to fix under pressure.
  3. “Our HR is handled internally.” — An internal review is useful. But it often misses what an experienced external auditor will catch, simply because internal teams are too close to the process.
What happens when you skip it?

Non-compliance with labour laws can result in penalties, legal notices, and reputational damage. Inaccurate payroll creates employee disputes and tax liability. Incomplete documentation means you have no defence in a labour court or during a government inspection.

More quietly: poor HR processes lead to disengaged employees, attrition, and leadership time wasted firefighting instead of growing.

What does an HR audit actually give you?

When done properly, an HR audit gives you three things:

  1. A clear picture of where your HR function stands today — strengths, gaps, and risks.
  2. A prioritised action plan — not a 40-page report that sits in a drawer, but specific steps ranked by urgency and impact.
  3. Peace of mind — knowing that your business is protected before an inspection, a dispute, or a growth event like fundraising or acquisition.
When is the right time for an HR audit?

The honest answer? Right now. But especially if:

  • You’re planning to scale hiring in the next 6–12 months
  • You’ve recently crossed 10, 20, or 50 employees (statutory thresholds often change at these points)
  • You’re preparing for funding, a merger, or due diligence
  • You’ve never done a formal review of your HR documentation
  • You’ve had employee complaints, exits, or disputes in the past year
A note on compliance in Kerala

For businesses in Kerala, compliance requirements include the Kerala Shops and Commercial Establishments Act, state-specific labour welfare contributions, and local municipal employment norms — in addition to central acts like PF, ESI, and the POSH Act. Getting these right requires someone who knows both the state and central regulatory landscape.

An HR audit isn’t a sign that something is wrong. It’s a sign that you’re running your business with intention. The companies that grow well aren’t just the ones with the best products — they’re the ones that build strong foundations early.

At Level UP HR Solutions, we conduct structured HR audits for SMEs across Kerala and India — giving you a clear, actionable compliance report without the jargon.

16Apr

5 Must-Have HR Documents Before Your First Hire

By Chippy Jayaprakash, Founder & CEO — Level UP HR Solutions

Most founders think HR documentation comes after 50 employees. That thinking costs lakhs — sometimes the entire business. Here are the five documents you need before you hire your very first person.

When a business runs into an employee dispute — an unfair dismissal claim, a salary disagreement, a confidentiality breach — the first thing a labour officer or court asks for is documentation. Not intent. Not memory. Not WhatsApp screenshots.

Paper. Signed. Dated.

I’ve seen Kerala SMEs with 30, 40, even 60 employees who couldn’t produce a single signed employment document. The result? Penalties, legal fees, and settlements that could have been avoided entirely with two hours of paperwork at the start.

HR documentation for small businesses isn’t bureaucracy. It’s protection — for your company and for your employees. And it starts on Day 1, not at employee #50.

THE 5 ESSENTIAL HR DOCUMENTS EVERY INDIAN SME NEEDS
1. APPOINTMENT LETTER / EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT

This is the foundation of every employment relationship. A proper employment contract in India must clearly state the role, responsibilities, compensation structure, working hours, probation period, notice period, and termination conditions. Many businesses issue only a basic offer letter — which is not the same thing and does not offer the same legal protection.

Risk without it: No legal basis to enforce notice periods, recover advances, or defend termination decisions.

2. HR POLICY DOCUMENT / EMPLOYEE HANDBOOK

Your HR policy for small businesses is the rulebook that governs how your workplace operates. It covers leave entitlements, attendance expectations, code of conduct, grievance procedures, disciplinary processes, and workplace behaviour standards. Without this, every HR decision you make is open to challenge — because there’s no agreed framework to reference.

Risk without it: Inconsistent decision-making creates discrimination claims and legal liability under the Industrial Disputes Act.

3. LEAVE POLICY

A standalone, written leave policy — covering Earned Leave, Sick Leave, Casual Leave, maternity and paternity provisions, and public holidays — is a statutory requirement under the Shops and Establishments Act in Kerala. It must be communicated to every employee in writing.

Risk without it: Shops & Establishments Act violations, leave encashment disputes, and employee grievances at exit.

4. NON-DISCLOSURE AGREEMENT (NDA) / CONFIDENTIALITY AGREEMENT

If your employees handle client data, pricing information, business processes, or any proprietary knowledge — and every employee does — you need a signed NDA from Day 1. Under Indian contract law, NDAs are enforceable when drafted correctly.

Risk without it: No legal recourse if an employee joins a competitor and uses your confidential business information.

5. STATUTORY COMPLIANCE RECORDS

This covers your PF registration and monthly ECR filings, ESI registration and contributions, Professional Tax enrolment, and the statutory registers required under Kerala labour law. These are legal obligations under the Employees’ Provident Funds Act, ESI Act, and Kerala Shops and Establishments Act.

Risk without it: Penalties, back-payment demands, and potential criminal liability for directors under PF and ESI acts.

THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN AN OFFER LETTER AND AN APPOINTMENT LETTER

An offer letter is a preliminary document — it expresses the intent to employ and outlines basic terms. It is conditional and not legally binding on its own.

An appointment letter — also called an employment contract — is the binding agreement that comes after the candidate accepts. It contains the full terms of employment, is signed by both parties, and is the document that holds legal weight in any dispute.

“Sending only an offer letter and never following up with a signed appointment letter is one of the most common — and most costly — HR documentation mistakes we find in SME audits across Kerala.”

HOW TO GET YOUR HR DOCUMENTATION IN ORDER — QUICKLY
  • Audit what you currently have — and identify the gaps
  • Draft or update your employment contracts to reflect current roles and compensation
  • Create a written HR policy document and distribute it to all employees
  • Ensure your statutory compliance registrations are current and filings are up to date
  • Get NDAs signed — including with existing employees where possible
  • Store all documents securely with signed acknowledgement from each employee

 

“The best time to set up your HR documentation was before your first hire. The second best time is today.”

If you’re unsure whether your current HR documentation is complete and compliant, our Free HR Audit will tell you exactly where the gaps are — and what to do about them. No obligation. No sales pitch. Just clarity.

14Apr

Why SMEs Lose Money Without HR Systems

By Chippy Jayaprakash, Founder & CEO — Level UP HR Solutions

72% of small and mid-sized businesses in India overpay or underpay their employees every single month. The reason isn’t greed or carelessness — it’s the absence of a proper HR system.

I’ve worked with dozens of SME owners across Kerala. Talented, hardworking entrepreneurs who’ve built real businesses — retail, trading, manufacturing, services. But when it comes to managing their people, most of them are running on WhatsApp messages, Excel sheets, and gut instinct.

And it’s costing them — quietly, consistently, and in ways they can’t always see on a P&L sheets.

THE HIDDEN COST OF “MANAGING HR MANUALLY”
Here’s what I typically find when we run a Free HR Audit for a first-time client:
  • Leave balances are tracked in someone’s personal notebook — or not tracked at all
  • PF deductions are calculated on the wrong salary component, creating future liability
  • Employees resigned without a proper full-and-final settlement — and the company has no record
  • There’s no signed appointment letter for at least 2–3 employees
  • Overtime is paid inconsistently, or not paid at all, violating the Shops & Establishments Act

 

None of these feel like emergencies — until a disgruntled employee files a complaint, or a bank asks for compliance records before approving your working capital loan.

IT’S NOT A HEADCOUNT PROBLEM. IT’S A SYSTEMS PROBLEM.

A lot of business owners tell me: “We’re only 15 people — we don’t need formal HR.”

I understand the instinct. HR feels like something you set up when you’ve “made it.” But that thinking gets the sequence wrong. You build the system before you need it — not after the crisis.

“The businesses that grow from 15 to 50 employees smoothly are the ones that treated HR seriously at 10. The ones that don’t, hit a ceiling — and spend the next two years firefighting instead of growing.”

An HR system doesn’t mean hiring a full-time HR manager. For most SMEs, it means three things:

  • A clean, compliant payroll process running on time, every month
  • Basic documentation — offer letters, leave policies, appointment orders — in place
  • Someone accountable for compliance: PF, ESI, PT, gratuity, F&F settlements
WHAT FIXING THIS ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE

One of our clients — a trading firm in Kozhikode with 22 employees — came to us after a payroll dispute with a long-serving employee. They were running payroll manually, had no written leave policy, and had never filed ESI for 6 employees who were eligible.

Within 60 days of engaging Level UP HR Solutions, they had a structured payroll system in place, all statutory registrations updated, and a basic employee handbook distributed to the team. The dispute? Resolved — because we had documentation to back every decision.

More importantly, the owner told me: “I’m sleeping better now.”

That’s what good HR does. It removes the invisible anxiety of running a business without a safety net.

If you’re an SME owner in Kerala — or managing a business with 10 to 150 employees — and you’re not sure whether your HR house is in order, I’d genuinely encourage you to find out.

We offer a Free HR Audit with no strings attached. We’ll tell you exactly where the risks are — and what to do about them.