OSHA describes workplace violence as, “any act or threat of physical violence, harassment, intimidation, or other threatening disruptive behavior. It ranges from threats and verbal abuse to physical assaults and even homicide.” The EEOC describes harassment as, “unwelcome conduct that “becomes unlawful where 1) enduring the offensive conduct becomes a condition of continued employment, or 2) the conduct is severe or pervasive enough to create a work environment that a reasonable person would consider intimidating, hostile, or abusive.” Interesting that both of these definitions seem to describe workplace bullying, yet many employers fail to address that issue.
Workplace bullying is systematic psychological abuse that degrades and humiliates, and causes anxiety, depression, burnout, and lower levels of job satisfaction in targets and bystanders. Behaviors include frequent yelling, manipulation of work, nasty emails, social isolation, and a host of others. This session will take you through the process of developing effective strategies for dealing with workplace bullying and provide a step-by-step guide for building a healthy workplace where employees can thrive.
WHY SHOULD YOU ATTEND?
If allowed to flourish, bullying causes increased turnover, communication breakdown, reduced quality in work and poor customer service. In the end, bullying creates an unsafe and unhealthy work environment that can cost an organization millions if not addressed. In fact, all negative behaviors at work cause anxiety, burnout, low job satisfaction, and increased turnover, but they have differing legal risks for employers. The distinction – and the overlap – between these concepts can certainly cause confusion, but not knowing the difference and acting proactively to stop these behaviors could result in an unwanted lawsuit brought by an employee.
AREA COVERED
- Definition of workplace bullying, violence and harassment and how they overlap
- How these behaviors are similar and different
- Consequences of allowing these behaviors to flourish
- Myths About Workplace Bullying
- Ten Steps to Eliminating Workplace Bullying
- The ultimate solution to bad behaviors: a positive workplace
- The social phenomenon of bad behaviors
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- Define similarities and differences in workplace bullying, harassment, and violence
- Describe damage caused by these behaviors to make a business case for ending them
- Understand these behaviors as a social phenomenon, including traits of perpetrators and targets
- Determine organizational cultural factors that allow negative behaviors to thrive
- Articulate tactics for building preventative and sustainable positive culture change which can serve as part of your defense if ever challenged
- Articulate regulatory updates, including the four state laws against workplace bullying, and the EEOC and NLRB’s stance on the issue
WHO WILL BENEFIT?
- HR
- Business Consultants
- EAP’s
- Small Business Owners
- Risk Management
- Employee Relations
- Unions
- Employment law attorneys
- In-house general counsel
If allowed to flourish, bullying causes increased turnover, communication breakdown, reduced quality in work and poor customer service. In the end, bullying creates an unsafe and unhealthy work environment that can cost an organization millions if not addressed. In fact, all negative behaviors at work cause anxiety, burnout, low job satisfaction, and increased turnover, but they have differing legal risks for employers. The distinction – and the overlap – between these concepts can certainly cause confusion, but not knowing the difference and acting proactively to stop these behaviors could result in an unwanted lawsuit brought by an employee.
- Definition of workplace bullying, violence and harassment and how they overlap
- How these behaviors are similar and different
- Consequences of allowing these behaviors to flourish
- Myths About Workplace Bullying
- Ten Steps to Eliminating Workplace Bullying
- The ultimate solution to bad behaviors: a positive workplace
- The social phenomenon of bad behaviors
- Define similarities and differences in workplace bullying, harassment, and violence
- Describe damage caused by these behaviors to make a business case for ending them
- Understand these behaviors as a social phenomenon, including traits of perpetrators and targets
- Determine organizational cultural factors that allow negative behaviors to thrive
- Articulate tactics for building preventative and sustainable positive culture change which can serve as part of your defense if ever challenged
- Articulate regulatory updates, including the four state laws against workplace bullying, and the EEOC and NLRB’s stance on the issue
- HR
- Business Consultants
- EAP’s
- Small Business Owners
- Risk Management
- Employee Relations
- Unions
- Employment law attorneys
- In-house general counsel
Speaker Profile
Catherine M. Mattice
Catherine M. Mattice, MA, SPHR, SHRM-SCP is President of consulting and training firm, Civility Partners, and has been successfully providing programs in workplace bullying and building positive workplaces since 2007. Her clients include Chevron, the American Red Cross, the military, several universities and hospitals, government agencies, small businesses and nonprofits. She has published in a variety of trade magazines and has appeared as an expert in major news outlets including NPR, FOX, NBC, ABC, USA Today, Inc Magazine, Huffington Post, Entrepreneur Magazine, Washington Times, Psychology Today and Bloomberg. Catherine is Past-President of the Association for Talent Development (ATD), San Diego …
Upcoming Webinars
ChatGPT and Project Management: Leveraging AI for Project M…
Workplace Investigations 101: How to Conduct your Investiga…
Project Management for administrative professionals
The Monte Carlo Simulations in Excel for Risky Investments
Onboarding is NOT Orientation - How to Improve the New Empl…
Dealing With Difficult People: At Work & In Life
Transform Data into Insights: A Beginners Guide to Excel Pi…
Construction Lending And Real Credit Administration: Evalua…
Understanding Accounting for non - Accounting professionals
Harassment, Bullying, Gossip, Confrontational and Disruptiv…
New Form 1099 Reporting Requirements: 2025 Compliance Update
Human Error Reduction Techniques for Floor Supervisors
HR Metrics and Analytics 2025 - Update on Strategic Plannin…
Treating Employees Like Adults: Discipline versus Empowerme…
7 Ways To Beat Burnout: Without Quitting Your Job
How to Write Procedures to Avoid Human Errors
Handbook Overhaul 2026: Compliance, OBBB Act & Beyond
FDA Proposes Framework to Advance Credibility of AI Models
Ethical Terminations: Navigating Employee Exits with Legal …
Understanding EBITDA – Definition, Formula & Calculation
Project Management for Non-Project Managers - Scheduling yo…
4-Hour Virtual Seminar on Hidden Secrets of Selling & Marke…
Validation Statistics for Non-Statisticians
Data Integrity and Privacy: Compliance with 21 CFR Part 11,…
The Alphabet Soup: When the FMLA, ADA, COBRA, and Workers' …
Talent Management: How to Leverage AI and ChatGPT Tools for…
Offboarding with Care: Conducting Legal & Ethical Employee …
2-Hour Virtual Seminar on How to Conduct an Internal Harass…
Payments Fraud Detect & Prevent Check, ACH and P-Card Schem…
Managing Toxic & Other Employees Who have Attitude Issues
Reduce Stress in the Workplace: Effective Ways to Handle Co…
Excel - Pivot Tables - The Key To Modern Data Analysis and …