Employment Law for Employers

Employment Lawyers for Employers Melbourne

Practical workplace advice for employers, directors, business owners and managers seeking to manage employment issues confidently and lawfully.

Business owner and employment lawyer walking together outside a Melbourne office building, discussing a workplace issue

Why employment law advice matters.

Workplace issues can arise quickly and become disproportionately expensive if they are not handled correctly from the outset. An unfair dismissal claim, a general protections application or a discrimination complaint can occupy management for months and carry both financial and reputational cost — even where the underlying decision was a sound one commercially.

Early advice often prevents claims, disputes and regulatory issues from arising at all. The performance management process that is run properly the first time, the redundancy that is consulted on, the misconduct allegation that is investigated fairly — each of those decisions becomes substantially harder to challenge when the process behind it is sound.

Employment decisions also need to be legally compliant while remaining commercially practical. The right answer is rarely the most cautious one. It is the one that lets the business achieve its objective with the lowest defensible level of risk.

Our approach is proactive risk management rather than reactive litigation. Most workplace problems are easier — and far cheaper — to prevent than to defend.

Why choose Parke Lawyers.

Employment law for employers needs decisive, commercially aware advice. Our team is structured to deliver exactly that.

Employment lawyer smiling and reviewing documents with a business client across an office meeting table
  • Employer-focused workplace advice

    Our employment practice is set up to advise employers, business owners, directors and HR decision-makers — not employees on the other side of the table.

  • Experience across business size

    From owner-operated SMEs and family businesses through to mid-market and larger organisations, with advice calibrated to the size and resources of the business.

  • Commercial law expertise behind it

    Workplace advice that sits alongside our commercial, contracts and corporate practice — particularly valuable for executive exits, sales of business and restructures.

  • Prevention and dispute resolution

    We help employers prevent claims through good contracts, policies and process — and defend them where claims have already been made.

  • Practical, decision-ready advice

    Clear advice on what an employer can lawfully do, what the risk profile of each option looks like and how to execute the decision defensibly.

  • Fair Work Commission experience

    Hands-on experience defending unfair dismissal, general protections and other Fair Work Commission proceedings on behalf of employers.

  • Melbourne CBD & Ringwood

    Two long-established offices serving employers across metropolitan Melbourne and regional Victoria.

  • ISO-certified practice

    Quality-assured systems, file management and confidentiality across every matter.

Our employment law services.

From contracts and policies through to investigations, performance management, restructures and the defence of Fair Work claims, we advise employers across the full employment law spectrum.

Employment Contracts

Drafting and reviewing employment, executive and contractor agreements that protect the business and reflect the actual role.

  • Drafting employment agreements
  • Executive contracts
  • Contractor agreements
  • Restraint clauses

Workplace Policies & Procedures

Modern, defensible policies and HR frameworks that set clear expectations and support consistent decision-making.

  • Policies and handbooks
  • Workplace compliance
  • Employee conduct standards
  • HR frameworks

Unfair Dismissal Claims

Strategic defence of unfair dismissal claims in the Fair Work Commission, from response through to conciliation and hearing.

  • Fair Work Commission proceedings
  • Employer responses
  • Settlement negotiations
  • Hearing preparation

General Protections & Adverse Action Claims

Defence of general protections, adverse action and discrimination claims involving allegations of unlawful treatment.

  • Workplace rights disputes
  • Discrimination allegations
  • Fair Work Act claims
  • Defence strategies

Performance Management & Discipline

Advice and process support on warnings, performance improvement, misconduct and termination decisions.

  • Warnings
  • Performance improvement processes
  • Misconduct investigations
  • Termination planning

Workplace Investigations

Structured, procedurally fair investigations into misconduct, bullying, harassment and other workplace complaints.

  • Misconduct allegations
  • Bullying complaints
  • Harassment investigations
  • Procedural fairness

Redundancies & Restructuring

Advice on genuine redundancy, consultation obligations and the lawful execution of restructuring decisions.

  • Genuine redundancy advice
  • Consultation obligations
  • Workforce restructuring
  • Risk management

Executive & Senior Employee Issues

Negotiated exits, restraint enforcement and confidentiality issues for senior and executive employees.

  • Executive exits
  • Confidentiality obligations
  • Restraint enforcement
  • Negotiated departures

Common situations with which we assist.

If any of the following describe your circumstances, an early conversation will usually save time, money and regulatory exposure.

Termination of employment letter on a desk with glasses, pen, watch and a phone

An employee has lodged an unfair dismissal claim

Strategic advice on the response, conciliation strategy and the realistic range of outcomes within the 21-day timeframe.

Performance concerns are emerging

Practical guidance on how to address performance issues fairly, clearly and in a way that protects the business if the matter escalates.

Misconduct allegations have been raised

Advice on how to respond to misconduct allegations — including immediate steps, investigation scope and natural justice obligations.

A workplace investigation is required

Scoping, conducting or overseeing a procedurally fair workplace investigation, with clear documentation and defensible findings.

Employment contracts need updating

Review and modernisation of employment contracts to reflect current law, the actual role and the protections the business needs.

A restructuring or redundancy process is planned

Advice on consultation, selection, redeployment and the steps required to ensure a redundancy is genuine and defensible.

Senior employees are leaving the business

Negotiated exit arrangements, deeds of release, restraint enforcement and confidentiality protections for departing senior employees.

Fair Work compliance concerns have arisen

Review of award coverage, payment arrangements, contractor classification and other Fair Work compliance risks.

Common employment law issues.

A short selection of the employment issues we most often advise on — each linked, where available, to a longer Information Centre explainer.

Unfair dismissal claims

How the Fair Work Commission approaches unfair dismissal, the 21-day time limit, the role of conciliation and the practical steps employers should take from day one.

Poorly drafted employment contracts

Why template employment contracts cause more disputes than they prevent, and the contractual protections that matter most for employers.

Workplace investigations

The hallmarks of a procedurally fair workplace investigation, the procedural traps that most often invalidate them, and when an external investigator should be engaged.

Read more

Performance management risks

Why so many performance management processes end up supporting an unfair dismissal claim rather than defending against one — and how to fix that.

Redundancy obligations

The legal requirements for a genuine redundancy, the consultation obligations under modern awards and enterprise agreements, and the redeployment question.

General protections claims

An overview of adverse action, the reverse onus of proof and why general protections claims have become the most strategically significant employment claim for employers.

Frequently asked questions.

Plain-English answers to the questions we are asked most often by Melbourne clients.

When should an employer obtain employment law advice?
As early as possible — ideally before taking action, not after. The most common employment law claims arise from decisions that were made quickly, without proper process, or on the basis of contracts and policies that did not properly support the decision. Early advice on performance management, misconduct, restructuring, redundancy or executive exits typically saves significantly more than it costs by reducing the prospects of an unfair dismissal, general protections or discrimination claim.
What is an unfair dismissal claim?
An unfair dismissal claim under the Fair Work Act 2009 is a claim by an eligible employee that their dismissal was harsh, unjust or unreasonable. The Fair Work Commission considers whether there was a valid reason for the dismissal, whether the employee was notified of that reason and given an opportunity to respond, whether they had support, and the size and resources of the employer. Strict 21-day time limits apply. Most matters are resolved at conciliation rather than at a final hearing.
How should performance issues be managed?
Performance issues should be addressed early, clearly and through a documented process. The expectations being failed should be specific and reasonable, the employee should understand what is required to meet them, they should be given support and a reasonable opportunity to improve, and the outcomes of each step should be recorded contemporaneously. A poorly run performance process is one of the most common sources of unfair dismissal exposure.
What makes a redundancy genuine?
Under the Fair Work Act, a redundancy is 'genuine' where the employer no longer requires the person's job to be performed by anyone because of changes in the operational requirements of the business, the employer has complied with any consultation obligations in the applicable award or enterprise agreement, and it would not have been reasonable in all the circumstances to redeploy the employee within the employer or an associated entity. Failing any one of those limbs can convert a redundancy into a dismissal that is open to challenge.
When is a workplace investigation required?
A workplace investigation is required (or strongly advisable) whenever the employer needs to determine, on a defensible basis, what occurred — typically in response to misconduct allegations, bullying or harassment complaints, safety incidents or whistleblower disclosures. The hallmarks of a sound investigation are procedural fairness to all participants, a properly defined scope, an impartial investigator, clear documentation and confidentiality. A poorly run investigation can be more damaging than the conduct it was set up to address.
Can employees challenge disciplinary action?
Yes. Disciplinary action — including warnings, suspensions, demotions and termination — can be challenged through several avenues, including unfair dismissal, general protections (adverse action), discrimination, breach of contract and (in some cases) workers' compensation or workplace health and safety processes. The best defence is a proper process supported by clear policies, contemporaneous documentation and adherence to natural justice.
What should be included in an employment contract?
At a minimum: position and reporting line, commencement date, ordinary hours, remuneration and any salary set-off arrangements, leave entitlements, applicable award or enterprise agreement, probation, confidentiality, intellectual property, post-employment restraints, termination rights and notice periods, and any deductions authorised on termination. Senior and executive contracts require additional terms around bonuses, equity, gardening leave and notice. Template contracts pulled from the internet are a frequent source of avoidable exposure.
What are general protections claims?
General protections (also known as adverse action) claims are made under Part 3-1 of the Fair Work Act. They protect employees from adverse action taken because they have or exercise a workplace right, engage in industrial activity, or because of a protected attribute (such as race, sex, age or disability). The legal threshold is lower than for unfair dismissal in important respects — including a reverse onus of proof on the employer — and uncapped compensation is available. These claims are increasingly common.
How can employers reduce employment law risk?
By getting the basics right: properly drafted contracts that match the role, current and well-communicated workplace policies, consistent performance management practices, a defensible process for misconduct and termination, proper consultation around change, and early legal advice when a sensitive issue first appears. Most employment law claims are not caused by bad intent — they are caused by good intent executed without process.
Should workplace policies be reviewed regularly?
Yes. Workplace policies — including codes of conduct, performance management, bullying and harassment, discrimination, leave, social media, workplace surveillance and grievance procedures — should be reviewed at least every two years and immediately following any significant legislative change or workplace incident. Policies that are out of date or inconsistently applied are routinely relied on by employees in unfair dismissal and general protections claims to demonstrate that the employer's process was unfair.

Related Information Centre articles.

In-depth, plain-English reading from our Information Centre.

View all articles →

Employment Law for Employers

Workplace problems are easier to prevent than defend.

Practical and timely employment law advice can help employers manage workplace issues, reduce risk and focus on running their business.