CareersPREMIUM

How to... have a bully-free workplace

Unchecked bullying and harassment can drain talent, kill innovation and damage even the strongest organisations

Picture: 123RF
Picture: 123RF

When bullying and harassment are allowed to fester and spread through workplaces, they become toxic, affecting the health and productivity of workers.

"Leaving harassment unchecked is not only a moral failure by business leaders, it’s a business risk. The financial impact of a drain of talent and innovative capacity, lost productivity, high staff turnover with increased recruitment and training costs, legal costs and reputational damage can quietly destabilise even the most robust organisations," says Prof Renata Schoeman, the head of health-care leadership at Stellenbosch Business School. She advises:

Bullying in the workplace can take many forms, though is too often unreported as victims choose to resign instead;

All organisations need a clearly communicated, zero-tolerance policy;

Provide regular, mandatory training that covers the definitions of harassment, and the organisation’s policy and reporting procedures for all employees; and

Investigate all complaints swiftly, thoroughly and impartially.

Would you like to comment on this article?
Sign up (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Comment icon