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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Business
Levi Winchester

Woman, 60, wins tribunal case after boss 'fired her for being bad at social media'

A marketing assistant, aged 60, was unfairly dismissed from her job because she was poor at social media, a tribunal has ruled.

Sylvia Williams was sacked by bosses at Lyons Holiday Parks after they had “fallen behind competitors” in terms of online followers.

The employment hearing was told managers wanted more “likes” and “shares” online and blamed her for the “inefficiency” of their social pages.

But Ms Williams wasn't offered a training course, the tribunal heard, and had been “sidelined“ in favour of younger employees in their 20s.

She was then allegedly pulled into an "engineered" redundancy process and later sacked.

Ms Williams had tried to sue Lyons Holiday Parks for age discrimination but a tribunal threw out the claim. She was successful in suing for unfair dismissal.

Lyons Holiday Parks offers caravan holidays and caravans for sale across north Wales and Cumbria (Daily Post Wales)

A tribunal report said: "Directors wanted to enhance and extend its marketing to fully exploit opportunities offered by digital marketing and social media.

"[They] realised it had fallen behind its competitors in such activities, including in the number of 'likes' and 'shares' of its postings."

Ms Williams had worked for Lyons Holiday Parks for nearly a decade when she was sacked in March 2020, then aged 60.

The hearing was told Ms Williams still adopted “historical” marketing techniques including the use of promotional vans or caravans.

Bosses also said to her “it was good to give youngsters a chance” when they employed younger staff.

Lucy Raven, 23, was appointed as a marketing assistant in 2017 to improve its social media and online duties were shifted onto her.

In December 2019, Miss Raven was invited on a training course but Ms Williams wasn't.

"Ms Williams was not seen as a long-term prospect in the re-vamped department given the department's past performance and the ill-will abounding", the tribunal report said.

It added: "[Lyons Holiday Parks'] senior management... felt from observations that Ms Williams was working within her comfort zone and was part of the problem of inefficiency in her department.

"The directors were uncertain as to what exactly she did to occupy herself all day at work. The department was seen not to be functioning as it ought to for the furtherance of the business and she was, in part, blamed."

Ms Williams was told she was at risk for redundancy - but the tribunal heard Lyons Holiday Parks had already decided she was to be sacked.

Around the same time, she applied for a new social media role the company advertised. She was given a second interview by manager Craig Moss despite him knowing her fate, the tribunal heard.

Mia Wilson, 21, got the social media job and Ms Williams was sacked.

Employment Judge Vin Ryan said: "Lyons Holiday Park created the appearance that she was pitched head-to-head in a competitive interview process with Ms Wilson.

"[They] had in fact singled out Ms Williams for dismissal and had sought Ms Wilson's application for the Social Media role."

Judge Ryan ruled that Ms Williams was unfairly dismissed but not discriminated against due to her age.

The judge said: "We find however that if Ms Williams was seen to be performing efficiently in her department and was making full, or even better, use of social media and exploiting its potential then she may not have been dismissed.

"We find that Lyons Holiday Parks was concerned with capability and performance and not the age profile of its employees.

"It wanted an efficient department collecting, collating, analysing and exploiting data about customers. Ms Williams had not shown an aptitude for this, albeit the company did not specifically train her.

"She was principally engaged in other activities which for the most part the company felt were not worth pursuing.

"Regardless of her age at the time the company did not see her as an efficient, high performing marketer capable of delivering what it wanted.

"That was the cause of the ill-will on the company's part. That was why it sought to dismiss her and engineered a so-called redundancy situation.

"There was nothing she could have done to save her employment... It was a foregone conclusion."

Lyons Holiday Parks, which has 14 sites in North Wales and Cumbria, currently has 1,709 followers on Twitter, 1,378 on Instagram, and 10,700 on Facebook.

Lyons Holiday Parks and Ms Williams reached a financial settlement out of court.

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