All posts tagged: Workplace

What Legally Counts As Workplace Bullying?

What Legally Counts As Workplace Bullying?

Legal comment provided by Jayne Harrison, Head of Employment Law at Richard Nelson LLP. Recently, reports claimed that Channel 5′s Dan Walker is set to appear before an employment tribunal following allegations of workplace bullying. But what is the legal definition of workplace bullying to begin with – and how can you tell if it’s happening to you? What are your rights if you think you’re being bullied in a professional setting? We spoke to Jayne Harrison, a head of employment law, about the topic. What’s the legal definition of workplace bullying? There isn’t a single legal definition of bullying. But, Harrison told us, “ACAS defines workplace bullying as offensive, intimidating, or malicious behaviour that abuses, undermines, or humiliates the recipient. “Bullying is usually characterised by behaviour that is directed at an individual, either with the intent to cause distress or with reckless disregard for the consequences. This behaviour must go beyond the ordinary unpleasantness of a workplace and create a foreseeable risk of harm.” Additionally, bullying can involve a pattern of repeated and deliberate …

11 Unfortunately Common Humiliation Rituals That Happen At Almost Every Job

11 Unfortunately Common Humiliation Rituals That Happen At Almost Every Job

While constructive negative feedback can sometimes improve employees’ performance in certain contexts, far more research has found that when someone feels embarrassed and ashamed at work, they are less likely to learn from failures and improve. While there are several unfortunately common humiliation rituals that still seem to happen at almost every job, that doesn’t mean they should be normalized. Your boss isn’t your parent, and they shouldn’t punish you as though you were a child. Your humanity deserves to be respected, regardless of your position, power, or salary. Here are 11 unfortunately common humiliation rituals that happen at almost every job 1. Being corrected publicly Zivica Kerkez | Shutterstock.com Especially with someone in a position of power at work, having a safe space to lean into for feedback is important. However, if your boss or manager regularly corrects your behavior in a shameful, public way without ever taking the time to offer real constructive criticism, chances are you’re battling with resentment. It’s uncomfortable dealing with feedback on its own, let alone in a room of …

There’s a Mass Rebellion Against AI in the Workplace

There’s a Mass Rebellion Against AI in the Workplace

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech With consumers roundly panning generative AI slop wherever it’s found, tech companies have set their sights on a more captive audience as a source of revenue: the world’s boardrooms and cubicle farms. But the office, it turns out, is also failing to provide fertile ground for its overtures. A new survey by the SAP-owned software company WalkMe of 3,750 executives and employees found a major discontent growing in large companies across the globe. According to the findings, 54 percent of workers reported avoiding their company’s in-house AI tools in order to complete tasks themselves. A full third of workers reported never using AI at all. The survey also identified a massive rift between workers and their bosses when it comes to AI. While 61 percent of executives surveyed said they trust the tech for complex, “business-critical” decisions, only nine percent of workers said the same. A further 88 percent of corporate bigwigs expressed confidence that the AI tools …

A smiley face can hurt your credibility at work, study finds

A smiley face can hurt your credibility at work, study finds

A cheerful emoji can brighten a group chat. In a workplace message, it may do something else entirely. That is the basic takeaway from a study led by University of Ottawa researchers, who examined how emojis shape impressions of competence and appropriateness in professional instant messages. Their results suggest that the safest option in workplace messaging is often the plainest one: no emoji at all. Across the study, messages without emojis were judged as the most professional and the most appropriate. Negative emojis did the most damage, especially when they appeared beside neutral or positive messages. Positive emojis fared better, but only in certain contexts, and they did not consistently improve how senders were viewed. The study was led by Erin L. Courtice of the School of Psychology in the Faculty of Social Sciences at uOttawa, working with Megan Lawrence, Charles A. Collin, and Isabelle Boutet. Across the study, messages without emojis were judged as the most professional and the most appropriate. (CREDIT: Shutterstock) “This study highlights the importance of being mindful about the potential …

Howard Stern’s former assistant sues, claiming famed radio personality created hostile workplace

Howard Stern’s former assistant sues, claiming famed radio personality created hostile workplace

The latest headlines from our reporters across the US sent straight to your inbox each weekday Your briefing on the latest headlines from across the US Your briefing on the latest headlines from across the US Howard Stern’s former assistant is suing the famed radio personality and his wife for allegedly subjecting her to a hostile work environment while employed at their 20,000-square-foot Hamptons estate, according to court filings reviewed by The Independent. In a state lawsuit filed Sunday, Leslie Kuhn, who began working for Stern in 2022 as his office manager at SiriusXM, says she was made the shock jock’s executive assistant the following year, and relocated to Southampton, New York, in 2024 – at the pair’s request – to provide “assistance with such things as managing the staff of the mansion, setting staffing schedules, completing staff payroll and managing general household operations, including Beth Stern’s extensive at-home feline rescue and fostering operations.” Beth Stern is a longtime animal activist who rescues and fosters abandoned dogs and cats, and is the national spokesperson and …

The Missing Personality Trait That Holds You Back At Work, Even If You’re Good At Your Job | Patricia Bonnard

The Missing Personality Trait That Holds You Back At Work, Even If You’re Good At Your Job | Patricia Bonnard

You can be great at your job and still feel like you’re not getting anywhere. That’s because the missing personality trait that can hold you back at work, even if you’re really good at your job, isn’t skill or experience; it’s confidence. Workplace confidence is a core personality trait that shapes how you show up, how others perceive you, and whether you get recognized for what you bring to the table. Confidence is what allows you to trust your abilities, speak up, and take ownership of your work without constantly second-guessing yourself. When that trait is underdeveloped, even highly capable people start playing smaller than they should. They hesitate, overthink, and hold back in ways that quietly hinder their growth, not because they aren’t good enough, but because they don’t fully believe it yet. When this personality trait is missing, it tends to show up in these 7 career-limiting ways: 1. You constantly compare yourself to everyone else Lack of workplace confidence is actually quite common. One study explored the significant impact that lower confidence …

AR headset transforms workplace training for people with disabilities

AR headset transforms workplace training for people with disabilities

Before the headset went on, Armand could complete exactly one step of the task correctly. One out of ten. He wasn’t struggling because he wasn’t trying. The task, shelving library books in assigned locations, involves reading, pattern recognition, and spatial navigation. Without guidance, it stayed just out of reach. Within a single session, Armand completed 80 percent of the task steps correctly and independently. By the fourth session, he was at 100 percent. Nineteen days after the intervention ended, with no headset, no coach, no prompting of any kind, he was still at 100 percent. Three other participants in the study followed a nearly identical arc. Researchers at Florida Atlantic University wanted to know whether augmented reality could change that equation. (CREDIT: Shutterstock) The 15% Problem Only about 15 percent of people with intellectual and developmental disabilities hold competitive, integrated employment. That number has remained stubbornly low despite decades of federal investment in supported employment programs and policy frameworks designed to open the workforce to people with significant disabilities. The gap isn’t for lack of …

Gen Z Worker Shamed For Quitting At The First Sign Of Hard Work

Gen Z Worker Shamed For Quitting At The First Sign Of Hard Work

Gen Z is notoriously known as the job-hopping generation, and according to the latest research, they are only staying in jobs for about a year before moving on to something better. But does that mean they don’t want to work hard? According to Gen Z employee Peyton, that’s absolutely the case, and he shamed a Gen Z co-worker who quit when tasked with a tedious project. But not everyone was on board with the criticism. Because Gen Z entered the workforce during the global pandemic, they are adaptable, value flexibility, and aren’t afraid of a career change. They are also the generation shaped by speaking up against social injustice, which explains why they don’t fear leaving a job they feel disrespected at for a new one. So maybe refusing to do a tedious task just means the Gen Zer knew his worth and wasn’t willing to put up with his employer taking advantage of him. A Gen Z worker was shamed for quitting at the first sign of hard work. While some think quitting jobs relates …

Commentary: Job performance reviews are outdated and often pointless – so why keep using them?

Commentary: Job performance reviews are outdated and often pointless – so why keep using them?

Social scientists have repeatedly warned that when a metric becomes a target, it stops being a good measure because people alter their behaviour to score well on the indicator itself. In practice, “over‑optimising” to a KPI nudges people to game the numbers or incentivises the wrong behaviours. Workers take shortcuts or work too much rather than improve the actual outcome of that work. Organisations see the same pattern on a broader scale: counting outputs and chasing quotas can depress quality, long‑term value and collaboration. This is especially true when automation takes over routine tasks and human contributions shift toward creativity, problem‑solving and long-term value creation – things that are hard to reduce to a single metric. Conversely, when performance metrics lack clarity, supervisors’ subjective opinions tend to substitute for actual data. Yet many workplaces still default to old metrics simply because they are familiar, quantifiable and embedded. The irony is striking: organisations have more employee information than ever before, yet many performance systems still rely on out-of-date snapshots and reductive metrics. As one expert notes, …

Most women experience sex discrimination in the workplace – damning poll shows | UK | News

Most women experience sex discrimination in the workplace – damning poll shows | UK | News

A majority of women still experience sex discrimination in the workplace, a damning UK audit reveals. The extraordinary findings of a nationwide poll shows most have fears about personal safety and harassment at offices and factories across the country. More than two thirds said they still experience gender-based discrimination while 70% of said they did not feel safe in the workplace with the most common reasons given as personal security, including lone working, a lack of protection from bullying and harassment, and physical safety. The state-of-the-nation snapshot, which saw 101 business titans surveyed, was commissioned to mark International Women’s Day by UK personalised workwear provider MyWorkwear. Gayle Parker, Commercial Director at MyWorkwear, said: “Workplace equality isn’t just about pay. “It’s about safety, inclusion and ensuring women feel safe when they go, attend and come back from work. The results are clearly telling us that this is not the case, and firms need to take action to turn this worrying trend around. “We want to encourage the next generation of female leaders to believe they can …