Redundancy essentials: the selection process

Last updated: May 15th, 2023

First published: May 15th 2023
Last updated: May 15th 2023

A restructure or reduction in headcount is a tough situation for both employers and employees.

If your organisation is going through a difficult trading period, you may be looking at ways to reduce expenditure and labour costs are likely to be one of your biggest expenses.

As well as the technical employment law issues that you have to consider, the way you handle a redundancy process will have a big impact on your employee relations with staff who remain on with your organisation once the restructure is complete.

To ensure you’re both compliant and handling the interpersonal aspects of a restructure correctly, your redundancy process should follow the principles and guidance set out in redundancy and unfair dismissal legislation.

Three key redundancy questions

When reviewing a redundancy-related claim, the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) generally consider these three key questions:

  • Was there a genuine reason for the redundancy?
  • Did the employer carry out a fair consultation process?
  • Did the employer use a fair selection process?

This post will focus on the last issue and the importance of using a fair selection process before confirming what employees are to be made redundant.

Automatically unfair reasons for dismissal

Under unfair dismissals legislation, selecting an employee for redundancy based on certain specific grounds is automatically unfair. These grounds include:

  • Trade union activity
  • Pregnancy
  • Religious beliefs
  • Political opinions.

In addition, you risk receiving a discrimination claim if an employee believes they have been made redundant based on one of the nine protected characteristics set out in the Employment Equality Acts. These protected characteristics include age, gender, race, family status and sexual orientation.

Why employers must use a fair selection process

Fair selection processes are particularly relevant when a restructure involves selecting some but not all employees who work the same or similar jobs for redundancy.

It’s vital to use a fair selection process in these circumstances to avoid allegations that there was a personal or subjective reason for an employee’s selection for redundancy.

You should also ensure that an employee’s selection for redundancy is:

  • Not due to one of the automatic unfair reasons for dismissal above
  • Not in contravention of an agreed policy or contractual selection process, or
  • Not in contravention of past custom and practice in respect of selection.

If you have no procedure in place, the general rules of fairness and reasonability apply. If no redundancy policy or custom and practice exists in respect of selection, you should seek to agree the selection method, and any associated criteria, before commencing the redundancy consultation process.

By securing agreement to the selection method, you reduce the risk of making an unfair selection during your redundancy process.

Common selection methods for redundancy

Examples of objective and reasonable selection methods include:

  • ‘last in first out’ (LIFO) where the most recently recruited employees are selected for redundancy
  • using a skills selection matrix. The criteria used in the selection matrix should be objective so that employees are fairly selected for redundancy. The criteria could include qualifications, skills, experience and performance. It’s important to explain the implications of using a selection matrix to the staff who are on notice and to offer them an opportunity to query any aspect of the selection criteria that they have concerns about.

The best method to choose will depend on the needs of your organisation and the role being made redundant.

Expert advice on redundancy selection processes

A redundancy scenario is a difficult situation for employers to manage.

For expert help with any queries on this technical area of employment law, call us today on 01 886 0350 or leave your details here and we’ll call you back.

Book a call with a consultant

Complete the form below and a consultant will call you as soon as possible.

Book a call with a consultant

Complete the form below and a consultant will call you as soon as possible.

Latest Resources

St Patrick’s Day: Have you prepared for absenteeism?

Published: March 20th 2024 Following national celebrations and public holidays like St Patrick’s day, you could find yourself down several staff members. And – as […]

What Employees Are Entitled to a Public Holiday Benefit & How Are Benefits Calculated?

public holiday
Published: March 20th 2024 From Easter Monday to St Patrick’s Day, Ireland gets ten public holidays and, with them, public holiday benefits. But what if […]

What happens when workplace romances go wrong

workplace romances gone wrong
First published: February 14th 2024 Last updated: February 14th 2024 Love makes the world go round, or so they say. But what effect does love […]

Olga Shevchenko

Director/Advocate, Immigration Advice Bureau

Olga Shevchenko specialises in immigration advocacy and consultancy, in particular, employment permit, visas, family reunification, citizenship, etc, for those seeking to visit, reside or invest in Ireland.

Olga provides extensive information, knowledge, and support to her clients, enabling access to positive solutions for people struggling to handle the immigration law.

Minister Neale Richmond

Minister of State, Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment

Neale Richmond TD was appointed as Minister of State at the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment with special responsibility for Employment Affairs and Retail Business and the Department of Social Protection in January 2023.

Much of his work at the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment is with businesses, workers, their representative bodies and the State Agencies to ensure that the economic recovery and growth extends to all parts of the country. He works closely with the SME sector, including retail, on building resilience and on the transition to the green and digital economies.

Mark Carpenter

Director of Regulatory & Corporate Affairs, Sky

Mark Carpenter is Director of Regulatory & Corporate Affairs at Sky Ireland. In this role he has responsibility for External and Internal Communications, Public Policy and Regulatory Affairs and the company’s ‘Bigger Picture’ (CSR) programme. He also works closely with Sky Group teams on a variety of matters, in particular our partnerships with domestic broadcasters.

Prior to working at Sky, Mark worked as a Policy Officer in Houses of the Oireachtas and as a Management Consultant at Accenture. He has a BA in History from Oxford University and a PhD in Political Science from Trinity College Dublin.

Nora Cashe

Litigation and Compliance Manager, Peninsula

Nóra studied Law in Griffith College Dublin and qualified as a Barrister in 2008, practising in the area of Criminal law. She is also member of the Irish Employment Law Association.

Nora has extensive experience representing clients at Employment Tribunal hearings, Conciliation / Mediation meetings before both the Workplace Relations Commission and the Labour Court. 

Nóra is a member of the Irish Employment Law Association and engages with the WRC Adjudication Service as part of their stakeholder engagement forum.

Deiric McCann

Managing Director, Genos International Europe

Deiric McCann leads Genos International Europe – The EU division of a world-leading provider of emotional intelligence solutions. 

With over two decades experience at the highest levels of management, Deiric supports clients to develop the resilience, emotional intelligence, psychological safety and engagements of their employees.

Rhiannon Coyne

Senior HR Consultant, Graphite HRM

Rhiannon Coyne is a Senior HR Consultant at Graphite HRM and will be providing an overview of best practice on how to deal with complaints of bullying and harassment in the workplace. 

With a number of recent updates to employment laws, Rhiannon will take a closer look at employment equality and how it is interlinked to Health & Safety and what employers can learn from recent case laws.

David Begg

Chairman, Workplace Relations Commission

David Begg was appointed Chairperson of the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) in January 2021.

David is also a professor at Maynooth University Institute of Social Sciences. Mr Begg’s extensive history in the trade union movement included leading the ESB Officers Association and Irish Congress of Trade Unions, stepping away from the latter in 2001 to chair international aid agency Concern.

David Begg was also previously a director of the Central Bank of Ireland between 1995 and 2010.