20 June 2019
Marie Christie, Payroll Manager
The session was presented by Mark Walker from Coventry University and Jason Norris from Deloitte.
Mark explained that Coventry University has been working on its approach to internationalisation for many years and they currently have a team of five within HR and a team in Legal dealing with their Internationalisation. They ensure that they establish/consider the following for each case:
They work in collaboration with their professional services team, who they meet with on a weekly basis to discuss cases. They engage with Deloitte at the earliest opportunity regarding their intended approach in the relevant country, and they find getting things right up front is much better than trying to fix things after the event!
They also have a policy that all travel needs to be booked through Key travel, enabling them to have a fuller overview of who is going where, and therefore what overseas activities are taking place.
Mark often has to schedule Skype calls in the early hours due to the different time zones and often travels to the countries where Coventry University has people working. The Coventry team feel it is key to work closely with their in-country advisors - this cuts out the middle man and helps to ensure the in-country advisor understands what the University expects from them and what they expect from the University, which helps to ensure that everyone is kept up to date with progress.
Jason provided some information on China, and explained that it is one of the most difficult countries you can engage someone to work in, due to monthly tax returns, employer compliance issues and regular changes to rules and regulations. Jason warned universities to be aware that using international student recruitment agents in China can lead to the agents becoming de facto employees.
Jason also looked at some of the potential impacts on international mobility that Brexit might have: